Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine/Division of Cardiovascular Disease (G.C., C.M.H., M.J.A.), the Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (L.J.K., D.J.T., M.L.W., C.M.H., M.J.A.), and the Department of Internal Medicine/Division of Cardiovascular Disease, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine (M.J.A.), Rochester, Minn.
Abstract
Background—
Swimming is a relatively genotype-specific arrhythmogenic trigger for type 1 long-QT syndrome (LQT1). We hypothesize that mimickers of concealed LQT1, namely catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT), may also underlie swimming-triggered cardiac events.
Methods and Results—
Between August 1997 and May 2003, 388 consecutive, unrelated patients were referred specifically for LQTS genetic testing. The presence of a personal and/or family history of a near-drowning or drowning was determined by review of the medical records and/or phone interviews and was blinded to genetic test results. Comprehensive mutational analysis of the 5 LQTS-causing channel genes,
KCNQ1
(LQT1),
KCNH2
(LQT2),
SCN5A
(LQT3),
KCNE1
(LQT5), and
KCNE2
(LQT6), along with
KCNJ2
(Andersen-Tawil syndrome) and targeted analysis of 18 CPVT1-associated exons in
RyR2
, was performed with the use of denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography and direct DNA sequencing. Approximately 11% (43 of 388) of the index cases had a positive swimming phenotype. Thirty-three of these 43 index cases had a “Schwartz” score (≥4) suggesting high clinical probability of LQTS. Among this subset, 28 patients (85%) were LQT1, 2 patients (6%) were LQT2, and 3 were genotype negative. Among the 10 cases with low clinical probability for LQTS, 9 had novel, putative CPVT1-causing
RyR2
mutations.
Conclusions—
In contrast to previous studies that suggested universal LQT1 specificity, genetic heterogeneity underlies channelopathies that are suspected chiefly because of a near-drowning or drowning. CPVT1 and strategic genotyping of
RyR2
should be considered when LQT1 is excluded in the pathogenesis of a swimming-triggered arrhythmia syndrome.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
228 articles.
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