Author:
Maanja Maren,Schlegel Todd T,Kozor Rebecca,Bacharova Ljuba,Wong Timothy C.,Schelbert Erik B,Ugander Martin
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundConventional electrocardiographic (ECG) signs of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) lack sensitivity. The aim was to identify LVH based on an abnormal spatial peaks QRS-T angle, and evaluate its diagnostic and prognostic performance compared to that of conventional ECG criteria for LVH.MethodsThis was an observational study with four cohorts, all with a QRS duration <120 ms: (1) Healthy volunteers to define normality (n=921), (2) Separate healthy volunteers to compare test specificity (n=461), (3) Patients with at least moderate LVH by cardiac imaging (Imaging-LVH) to compare test sensitivity (n=225), and (4) Patients referred for cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate the combined outcome of hospitalization for heart failure or all-cause death (Clinical-Consecutive, n=783).ResultsAn abnormal spatial peaks QRS-T angle was defined as exceeding the upper limit of normal, which was found to be ≥ 40° for females and ≥ 55° for males. In healthy volunteers, the specificity of the QRS-T angle to detect LVH was 96% (females) and 98% (males). In Imaging-LVH, the QRS-T angle had a higher sensitivity to detect LVH than conventional ECG criteria (93–97% vs 13–56%, p<0.001 for all). In Clinical-Consecutive, of those who did not have any LVH, 238/556 (43%) had an abnormal QRS-T angle, suggesting it can occur even without LVH. There was an association with outcomes in univariable analysis for the QRS-T angle, Cornell voltage, QRS duration, and Cornell product (hazard ratios 1.68–2.5, p<0.01 for all) that persisted in multivariable analysis only for the QRS-T angle and QRS duration (p<0.001 for both).ConclusionsAn increased QRS-T angle rarely occurred in healthy volunteers, was a mainstay of moderate or greater LVH, was common in clinical patients without LVH but with cardiac co-morbidities, and associated with outcomes. Thus, an increased QRS-T angle identifies left ventricular electrical remodeling that can occur in the absence of LVH detected by imaging. The improved diagnostic and independent prognostic performance for the QRS-T angle suggests that it should be investigated when ECGs are evaluated.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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