Long QT Syndrome and WPW Syndrome: A Very Rare Association between Two Causes of Sudden Cardiac Death in a Young Patient.
Radu Gabriel VatasescuSilvia DeaconuCorneliu Nicolae IorgulescuGabriela MarascuBogdan OpritaAlexandru DeaconuPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2024)
Long QT syndrome (LQT) and WPW syndrome are causes of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in the young, and their association has been rarely reported. A 26-year-old woman presented with recurrent syncope. Her ECG showed a short PR interval, wide QRS (150 ms) due to a delta wave, and QT prolongation (QT 580 ms, QTc 648 ms). ECG monitoring documented recurrent salvos of a self-terminating wide QRS tachycardia, generally slightly polymorphic, sometimes with "torsade des pointes" (TdP) appearance, which were linked to the syncopal/presyncope episodes. Electrophysiologic monitoring diagnosed a right para-hisian accessory pathway with a very short ERP (240 ms baseline, <200 ms after isoproterenol). The pathway was ablated successfully. Despite QRS narrowing (80 ms), QT prolongation persisted after ablation (QT 620 ms, QTc 654 ms), with short runs of TdP, despite beta-blocker treatment, which was increased to the maximal dosage. A dual-chamber implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) was implanted. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of an association between LQT and WPW syndrome in which both conditions are associated with an increased risk of SCD.