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BROUWER ET AL., PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF HEART
RATE VARIABILITY
JACC Vol. 28, No. 5, November 1, 1996:1183-9
Prognostic Value of Heart Rate
Variability During
Long-Term Follow-Up in Patients With Mild to Moderate Heart
Failure
Jan Brouwer, MD,
Dirk J. van Veldhuisen, MD, FACC,
Arie J. Man in 't Veld, MD,*
Jaap Haaksma, BSc,
W. Arnold Dijk, PhD,
Klaas R. Visser, PhD,
Frans Boomsma, PhD,*
Peter H. J. M. Dunselman, MD,†
K.I. Lie, MD, for the Dutch Ibopamine Multicenter Trial Study Group‡
Groningen, Rotterdam and Breda, The Netherlands
Abstract
Objectives. We sought to assess the
prognostic value of heart rate
variability measures,
including Poincaré plots, in patients with mild to moderate chronic heart
failure.
Background. Mortality is high in patients with heart
failure, and many of them die suddenly. However, identification of high risk
patients, particularly those with an increased risk for sudden death, has
remained difficult.
Methods. We studied 95 patients with heart
failure (mean [±SD] age 60 ± 8 years, left ventricular ejection fraction 0.29
± 0.09, New York Heart
Association functional class II [81%] and III [19%]) during up to 4 years of
follow-up. Heart rate
variability measures
and Poincaré plots were obtained from 24-h Holter recordings.
Results. During follow-up, 17 (18%) of the 95
patients died. In 15 patients, death was cardiac related (11 patients
experienced sudden death). None of the conventional time and frequency domain
measures of heart rate
variability were
related to survival. In contrast, abnormal Poincaré plots identified a
significantly higher risk for all-cause cardiac death (Cox proportional hazards
ratio 5.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.6 to 20.6, univariate analysis) and
for sudden cardiac death (hazards ratio 6.8, 95% CI 1.5 to 31.4) compared with
those with normal Poincaré plots. Patients with abnormal Poincaré plots were
shown to have a lower left ventricular ejection fraction (0.26 ± 0.10 vs. 0.31
± 0.08, p < 0.05) and higher plasma norepinephrine concentrations (506 ±
207 pg/ml vs. 411 ± 175 pg/ml, p < 0.05). In multivariate analysis, abnormal
Poincaré plots still had independent prognostic value, both for all-cause
cardiac mortality and for sudden cardiac death (hazards ratio 5.3, 95% CI 1.2 to
17.1, hazards ratio 4.5, 95% CI 1.0 to 27.5, respectively.
Conclusions. Heart
rate variability
analysis, as assessed by Poincaré plots, has independent prognostic value in
patients with mild to moderate chronic heart
failure and identifies an increased risk for all-cause and sudden cardiac death
in these patients.
(J Am Coll Cardiol 1996;28:1183-9)
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