Pathological view of sudden cardiac death.
The common cause of sudden cardiac death is ischaemic heart disease. Such patients may have an occlusive recent thrombosis in a major coronary artery but the largest group has no recent occlusion. Comparison of such patients without occlusion with non-cardiac death control hearts suggests that an area of stenosis of 85 per cent is the best discriminating level. Most subjects who die of ischaemic heart disease suddenly have this degree of stenosis in two or three major arteries. Non-ischaemic sudden cardiac death occurs in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and in severe left ventricular hypertrophy particularly from aortic valve stenosis. When the heart is macroscopically normal, review of previous electrocardiograms is the most helpful guide and may disclose conditions such as a long QT interval or pre-excitation. When no such data are available examination of the conduction system histologically may be helpful but is often non-specific. Use of the term "cardiomyopathy" by pathologists to cover all non-ischaemic sudden cardiac death is clinically misleading.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Sezgin, A. T., Barutcu, I., Ozdemir, R., Gullu, H., Topal, E., Esen, A. M., Tandogan, I., Acikgoz, N.
(2007). Effect of Slow Coronary Flow on Electrocardiographic Parameters Reflecting Ventricular Heterogeneity. ANGIOLOGY
58: 289-294
[Abstract] -
Savopoulos, C., Ziakas, A., Hatzitolios, A., Delivoria, C., Kounanis, A., Mylonas, S., Tsougas, M., Psaroulis, D.
(2006). Circadian Rhythm in Sudden Cardiac Death: A Retrospective Study of 2,665 Cases. ANGIOLOGY
57: 197-204
[Abstract] -
Bernus, O., Zemlin, C. W., Zaritsky, R. M., Mironov, S. F., Pertsov, A. M.
(2005). Alternating conduction in the ischaemic border zone as precursor of reentrant arrhythmias: A simulation study. Europace
7: S93-S104
[Abstract] [Full Text] -
Balbay, Y., Cosgun, A., Jean-Baptiste, R., Demir, A. D., Tikiz, H., Korkmaz, S., Kutuk, E.
(2001). Effects of Valsalva Maneuver on QT Dispersion in Patients with Ischemic Heart Diseases. ANGIOLOGY
52: 735-741
[Abstract] -
Demir, A. D., Senen, K., Balbay, Y., Soylu, M., Tikiz, H., Korkmaz, S.
(2001). Effects of Atrial Pacing on QT Dispersion in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease Without Angina Pectoris and ST Segment Depression. ANGIOLOGY
52: 393-398
[Abstract] -
Basso, C., Corrado, D., Rossi, L., Thiene, G.
(2001). Ventricular Preexcitation in Children and Young Adults : Atrial Myocarditis as a Possible Trigger of Sudden Death. Circulation
103: 269-275
[Abstract] [Full Text] -
Damle, R. S., Robinson, N. S., Ye, D.-Z., Roth, S. I., Greene, R., Goldberger, J. J., Kadish, A. H.
(1995). Electrical Activation During Ventricular Fibrillation in the Subacute and Chronic Phases of Healing Canine Myocardial Infarction. Circulation
92: 535-545
[Abstract] [Full Text] -
Brooks, R., McGovern, B. A., Garan, H., Ruskin, J. N.
(1991). Current Treatment of Patients Surviving Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. JAMA
265: 762-768
[Abstract]
Register for free content
The full back archive is now available for all BMJ Journals. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006 right back to volume 1 issue 1. Register here to access the free archive of all BMJ Journals.
Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.
