Heart Rhythm
Volume 6, Issue 3, Supplement , Pages S22-S28, March 2009

Explaining the clinical manifestations of T wave alternans in patients at risk for sudden cardiac death

  • Michael J. Cutler, DO, PhD
  • ,
  • David S. Rosenbaum, MD

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests and correspondence: Dr. David S. Rosenbaum, Case Western Reserve University, Heart and Vascular Research Center, 2500 MetroHealth Drive, Hamann 330, Cleveland, Ohio 44109-1998

Heart and Vascular Research Center and the Department Biomedical Engineering, MetroHealth Campus, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

published online 13 October 2008.

The mechanisms underlying sudden cardiac death (SCD) are complex and diverse. Therefore, correct application of any marker to risk stratify patients for appropriate therapy requires knowledge regarding how the marker is reflective of a particular electroanatomical substrate for arrhythmias. Noninvasive measurement of beat-to-beat alternation of the electrocardiographic T-wave, referred to as T-wave alternans (TWA), is an important marker of risk for SCD. Is this relationship a mere association, or is TWA mechanistically linked to SCD? Recent experimental evidence strongly supports a mechanistic relationship between TWA and SCD. This review considers the underlying mechanisms of TWA derived from experimental studies, as they relate to clinical observations of TWA in humans, addressing the following questions derived from common clinical observations: (1) Where does TWA on the surface electrocardiogram come from? (2) Why is controlled heart rate elevation required to elicit TWA? (3) Why is TWA associated with risk for SCD? (4) Why is TWA associated with a broad range of ventricular arrhythmias? (5) How do commonly used medications affect TWA?

Keywords: Repolarization, Electrophysiology, Tachycardia, Calcium

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 This study was supported by National Institutes of Health grant R01-HL54807 (to David Rosenbaum, MD) and Fellowship Awards from the Heart Rhythm Society and NIH National Research Service Award (to Michael Cutler). Dr. David Rosenbaum receives research support from CardioDx and is a consultant to Cambridge Heart Inc. Dr. Michael Cutler has no potential conflicts of interest.

PII: S1547-5271(08)00974-0

doi:10.1016/j.hrthm.2008.10.007

Heart Rhythm
Volume 6, Issue 3, Supplement , Pages S22-S28, March 2009