A new physiological method for heart rate correction of the QT interval
P Davey
Department of
Cardiovascular Medicine, Level 2, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3
9DU, UK
Correspondence to: Dr Davey. email: patrick.davey{at}ndm.ox.ac.uk
Accepted for publication 3 February 1999
AIM
To reassess QT
interval rate correction.
BACKGROUND
The QT
interval is strongly and inversely related to heart rate. To compare QT
intervals between different subjects with different heart rates
requires the application of a QT interval rate correction formula. To
date these formulae have inappropriately assumed a fixed relation
between QT interval and heart rate. An alternative method of QT
interval rate correction that makes no assumptions about the QT
interval-heart rate relation is needed.
PROPOSAL
A QT heart
rate correction method should maintain or accentuate biological QT
interval variability, should totally remove the dependence of the rate
corrected QT interval on heart rate, and should be applicable over a
wide range of conditions with a wide range of differing autonomic states.
METHODS
QT intervals
were obtained at rest and during exercise from subjects expected to
have different QT intervals and different QT interval-heart rate
relations. A linear regression line was obtained from the exercise test
data, and the QT interval at a notional heart rate of 60 and 0 beats/min, termed the QT60 interval, and the QT y intercept
obtained by back calculation.
RESULTS
QT60
and QT y intercept values were prolonged in heart failure compared with
either left ventricular hypertrophy or controls. There was no relation
between heart rate and either QT60 or QT y intercept
CONCLUSIONS
This new
physiologically based method of correcting QT interval for heart rate
removes the dependence of the corrected QT interval on heart rate, and
maintains biological differences.
Keywords: QT interval; heart rate correction
© 1999 by Heart
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