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Washington University School of Medicine Digital Commons@Becker Conference Abstracts and Posters Division of Emergency Medicine/Emergency Care Research Section 2012 Characterization of short QTc interval in Emergency Department patients Peta-Gay Nolan Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis Stacey House Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis S. Eliza Halcomb Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/em_conf Recommended Citation Nolan, Peta-Gay; House, Stacey; Halcomb, S. Eliza, "Characterization of short QTc interval in Emergency Department patients" (2012). Conference Abstracts and Posters. Paper 15. http://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/em_conf/15 This Presentation Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Division of Emergency Medicine/Emergency Care Research Section at Digital Commons@Becker. It has been accepted for inclusion in Conference Abstracts and Posters by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Becker. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CHARACTERIZATION OF SHORT QTC INTERVAL IN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT PATIENTS Peta-Gay Nolan MD Stacey House MD, PhD S. Eliza Halcomb MD Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Great Plains Regional Research Forum St. Louis, MO. September 2012 © Stacey House, 2012 Contributors to Short QTc Interval Congenital Short QTc Syndrome, <300ms channelopathy with gain of function genetic mutations Prescriptions Thiazides Lithium Digoxin Lab abnormalities Hypercalcaemia Hypokalemia Complications of Short QTc Interval Early repolarization Atrial fibrillation Atrial flutter Ventricular fibrillation Sudden death Inducible ventricular fibrillation Treatment of Short QTc Syndrome Implantable cardioverter/defibrillator Hydroquindine (prolongs QT) Objective The study objective was to characterize the ED population with Short QTc Interval. Electrolyte abnormalities Temperature Chief complaints Presenting symptoms Medications Method Retrospective review of all ED patients who received an EKG from December 1, 2008 to November 30, 2009 Inclusion Criteria QTC ≤ 390 ms Exclusion Criteria Bradycardia (HR < 60 bpm) Tachycardia (HR >100 bpm) QRS >120 ms Non-sinus rhythm Left without being seen Patient Enrollment Excluded Patients Bradycardia Tachycardia Non-sinus rhythm Paced rhythm QRS > 120 ms LWBS or AMA 27,119 Patients 26,579 pts (98%) QTc > 390 ms 540 pts (2%) QTc ≤ 390 ms 265 pts (49%) Excluded 275 pts (51%) Eligible 211 pts (77%) QTc 380-390 ms % of all pts 184 pts 28 pts 62 pts 24 pts 8 pts 13 pts 0.8% 48 pts (17%) QTc 370-379 ms 0.2% 16 pts (6%) QTc ≤ 369 ms 0.1% Results These pts were 40±19 years old Male - 73%, 95%CI 68-78%. Comorbidities 0.35 0.3 Proportion Present 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 Htn DM CHF CAD/MI Pacemaker/AICD Arrhythmia Psych Drug Abuse HIV Presenting Symptoms 0.7 0.6 Proportion Present 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Chest Pain SOB Lightheaded/dizzy Syncope Ingestion Palpitations Fatigue/weakness Seizure Results 15% (95%CI 10-20%) had abnormal serum potassium. 13% (95%CI 9-18%) had abnormal serum calcium. 2% (95%CI 0.5-3.9%) were hyperthermic. Results Only 3% (95%CI 1-5%) were on home medications which shortened QTc interval including <1% on Digoxin, the most commonly described cause of medication-induced short QTc. 67% (95%CI 62-73%) were discharged from the ED. There were no significant differences among the different length QTc groups with regards to comorbidities, symptoms, electrolyte abnormalities, QTc shortening medications, or disposition. Discussion Shortened QTc interval occurs in 2% of ED patients <0.1% have QTc<369 ms Very small portion with short QTc interval also have hypercalcaemia, hyperthermia, and/or Digoxin therapy. As the majority of these patients are discharged to home, further studies are needed to determine the rates of cardiac events in patients with shortened QTc interval. References Panicker et al, 2012. Early repolarization and short qt interval in healthy subjects. Heart rhythm, vol 9, no 8. 1265-1271. Koboza et al. Identifying risk of cardiac events in short QT syndrome. Heart Rhythm, vol 9, No1 , January 2012 . Pages 76-77 Couderc et al. Short and long Qt syndrome: does QT length really matter? Journal of Electrocardiology43 (2010)396-399 Viskin, S. 2009. The Qt interval: Too long, too short or just right. Heart Rhythm, vol 6, no 5, May 2009 Miyamoto , A. et al. Clinical and electrocardiographic characteristics of patients with short Qt interval in a large hospital-base population. Heart rhythm, vol9, No1, January 2012. pages 66-74 Bjerregaard, P. short QT interval in clincal practice. Journal of electrocardiology 43 (2010) 390-395