Sudden cardiac death is frequent in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. To assess the risk of an arrhythmic event is still difficult. Here the analysis of the heart rate variability offers new possibilities.
Method: 25 patients (18 males, 7 females, age 53 +/- 9 yrs) with dilated cardiomyopathy were included in the study. Analysis of heart rate variability assessed by time- and frequency-domain measures was determined from Holter recording. The mean follow-up was 18 +/- 5 months.
Results: 6 patients died (5 of sudden cardiac death, 1 of heart failure), 1 patient with an implanted defibrillator received an adequate shock. Parameters influenced by low- and mid-frequent oscillations of the heart rate were significantly lower in patients who died suddenly or had adequate shocks. The best predictive parameter was the s.d.RR: all patients with an s.d.RR < 50 ms had lethal arrhythmias whereas the s.d.RR of the surviving patients was > or = 50 ms. No significant difference was found or high frequency parameters, which are mainly influenced by parasympathetic activity.
Conclusion: The analysis of heart rate variability is of prognostic relevance in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. Especially the s.d.RR is able to identify patients with a high risk of a sudden cardiac death.