Electrocardiographic changes during sustained normobaric hypoxia in patients after myocardial infarction

Author:

Kramer Tilmann,Hoenemann Jan-Niklas,Weis Henning,Hoffmann Fabian,Rosenkranz Stephan,Baldus Stephan,Hellmich Martin,Levine Benjamin D.,Jordan Jens,Tank Jens,Limper Ulrich

Abstract

AbstractThe safety of prolonged high-altitude stays and exercise for physically fit post-myocardial infarction (MI) patients is unclear. Myocardial tissue hypoxia and pulmonary hypertension can affect cardiac function and electrophysiology, possibly contributing to arrhythmias. We included four non-professional male athletes, clinically stable after left ventricular MI (three with ST-segment elevation MI and one with non-ST-segment elevation MI) treated with drug-eluting stents for single-vessel coronary artery disease. Oxygen levels were reduced to a minimum of 11.8%, then restored to 20.9%. We conducted electrocardiography (ECG), ergometry, and echocardiography assessments in normoxic and hypoxic conditions. With an average age of 57.8 ± 3.3 years and MI history 37 to 104 months prior, participants experienced a significant increase in QTc intervals during hypoxia using Bazett’s (from 402 ± 13 to 417 ± 25 ms), Fridericia’s (from 409 ± 12 to 419 ± 19 ms), and Holzmann's formulas (from 103 ± 4 to 107 ± 6%) compared to normoxia. This effect partially reversed during recovery. Echocardiographic signs of pulmonary hypertension during normobaric hypoxia correlated significantly with altered QTc intervals (p < 0.001). Despite good health and complete revascularization following MI, susceptibility to hypoxia-induced QTc prolongation and ventricular ectopic beats persists, especially during physical activity. MI survivors planning high-altitude activities should consult cardiovascular specialists with high-altitude medicine expertise.

Funder

Cologne Clinician Scientist Program (CCSP) / Faculty of Medicine / University of Cologne. Funded by the “Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft”

German Aerospace Center and the German Federal Ministry of Industry and Technology

Faculty of Health of the University of Witten / Herdecke internal grant program

Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e. V. (DLR)

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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