TY - JOUR
T1 - QT interval variability in body surface ECG
T2 - Measurement, physiological basis, and clinical value: Position statement and consensus guidance endorsed by the European Heart Rhythm Association jointly with the ESC Working Group on Cardiac Cellular Electrophysiology
AU - Baumert, Mathias
AU - Porta, Alberto
AU - Vos, Marc A.
AU - Malik, Marek
AU - Couderc, Jean Philippe
AU - Laguna, Pablo
AU - Piccirillo, Gianfranco
AU - Smith, Godfrey L.
AU - Tereshchenko, Larisa G.
AU - Volders, Paul G.A.
N1 - Funding Information:
M.B. received a fellowships and research grant from the Australian Research Council (DP110102049 and DP0663345). M.V. received research grants: TrigTreat and EU-CERT are FP7 programs of the EU and CTMM (COHFAR): a Dutch initiative in which five academic centres and Medtronic collaborate. M.M. received research grants from British Heart Foundation PG/12/77/29857 and PG/13/54/30358. L.T. received funding from the National Institutes of Health (NHLBI R01HL118277) and from Medtronic, Inc., Boston Scientific, and St Jude for investigator-initiated research. P.G.A.V. was supported by a Vidi grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (ZonMw 91710365).
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author 2016.
PY - 2016/6
Y1 - 2016/6
N2 - This consensus guideline discusses the electrocardiographic phenomenon of beat-to-beat QT interval variability (QTV) on surface electrocardiograms. The text covers measurement principles, physiological basis, and clinical value of QTV. Technical considerations include QT interval measurement and the relation between QTV and heart rate variability. Research frontiers of QTV include understanding of QTV physiology, systematic evaluation of the link between QTV and direct measures of neural activity, modelling of the QTV dependence on the variability of other physiological variables, distinction between QTV and general T wave shape variability, and assessing of the QTV utility for guiding therapy. Increased QTV appears to be a risk marker of arrhythmic and cardiovascular death. It remains to be established whether it can guide therapy alone or in combination with other risk factors. QT interval variability has a possible role in non-invasive assessment of tonic sympathetic activity.
AB - This consensus guideline discusses the electrocardiographic phenomenon of beat-to-beat QT interval variability (QTV) on surface electrocardiograms. The text covers measurement principles, physiological basis, and clinical value of QTV. Technical considerations include QT interval measurement and the relation between QTV and heart rate variability. Research frontiers of QTV include understanding of QTV physiology, systematic evaluation of the link between QTV and direct measures of neural activity, modelling of the QTV dependence on the variability of other physiological variables, distinction between QTV and general T wave shape variability, and assessing of the QTV utility for guiding therapy. Increased QTV appears to be a risk marker of arrhythmic and cardiovascular death. It remains to be established whether it can guide therapy alone or in combination with other risk factors. QT interval variability has a possible role in non-invasive assessment of tonic sympathetic activity.
KW - Autonomic nervous system
KW - ECG
KW - Heart rate variability
KW - QT interval variability
KW - Repolarization
KW - Sympathetic activity
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U2 - 10.1093/europace/euv405
DO - 10.1093/europace/euv405
M3 - Article
C2 - 26823389
AN - SCOPUS:84996564571
SN - 1099-5129
VL - 18
SP - 925
EP - 944
JO - Europace
JF - Europace
IS - 6
ER -