Cargando…

Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability

Increases in beat-to-beat variability of electrocardiographic QT interval duration have repeatedly been associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events and complications. The measurements of QT variability are frequently normalized for the underlying RR interval variability. Such normalizati...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Toman, Ondřej, Hnatkova, Katerina, Šišáková, Martina, Smetana, Peter, Huster, Katharina M., Barthel, Petra, Novotný, Tomáš, Andršová, Irena, Schmidt, Georg, Malik, Marek
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9011003/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35431991
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.863873
_version_ 1784687597887422464
author Toman, Ondřej
Hnatkova, Katerina
Šišáková, Martina
Smetana, Peter
Huster, Katharina M.
Barthel, Petra
Novotný, Tomáš
Andršová, Irena
Schmidt, Georg
Malik, Marek
author_facet Toman, Ondřej
Hnatkova, Katerina
Šišáková, Martina
Smetana, Peter
Huster, Katharina M.
Barthel, Petra
Novotný, Tomáš
Andršová, Irena
Schmidt, Georg
Malik, Marek
author_sort Toman, Ondřej
collection PubMed
description Increases in beat-to-beat variability of electrocardiographic QT interval duration have repeatedly been associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events and complications. The measurements of QT variability are frequently normalized for the underlying RR interval variability. Such normalization supports the concept of the so-called immediate RR effect which relates each QT interval to the preceding RR interval. The validity of this concept was investigated in the present study together with the analysis of the influence of electrocardiographic morphological stability on QT variability measurements. The analyses involved QT and RR measurements in 6,114,562 individual beats of 642,708 separate 10-s ECG samples recorded in 523 healthy volunteers (259 females). Only beats with high morphology correlation (r > 0.99) with representative waveforms of the 10-s ECG samples were analyzed, assuring that only good quality recordings were included. In addition to these high correlations, SDs of the ECG signal difference between representative waveforms and individual beats expressed morphological instability and ECG noise. In the intra-subject analyses of both individual beats and of 10-s averages, QT interval variability was substantially more strongly related to the ECG noise than to the underlying RR variability. In approximately one-third of the analyzed ECG beats, the prolongation or shortening of the preceding RR interval was followed by the opposite change of the QT interval. In linear regression analyses, underlying RR variability within each 10-s ECG sample explained only 5.7 and 11.1% of QT interval variability in females and males, respectively. On the contrary, the underlying ECG noise contents of the 10-s samples explained 56.5 and 60.1% of the QT interval variability in females and males, respectively. The study concludes that the concept of stable and uniform immediate RR interval effect on the duration of subsequent QT interval duration is highly questionable. Even if only stable beat-to-beat measurements of QT interval are used, the QT interval variability is still substantially influenced by morphological variability and noise pollution of the source ECG recordings. Even when good quality recordings are used, noise contents of the electrocardiograms should be objectively examined in future studies of QT interval variability.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9011003
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-90110032022-04-16 Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability Toman, Ondřej Hnatkova, Katerina Šišáková, Martina Smetana, Peter Huster, Katharina M. Barthel, Petra Novotný, Tomáš Andršová, Irena Schmidt, Georg Malik, Marek Front Physiol Physiology Increases in beat-to-beat variability of electrocardiographic QT interval duration have repeatedly been associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events and complications. The measurements of QT variability are frequently normalized for the underlying RR interval variability. Such normalization supports the concept of the so-called immediate RR effect which relates each QT interval to the preceding RR interval. The validity of this concept was investigated in the present study together with the analysis of the influence of electrocardiographic morphological stability on QT variability measurements. The analyses involved QT and RR measurements in 6,114,562 individual beats of 642,708 separate 10-s ECG samples recorded in 523 healthy volunteers (259 females). Only beats with high morphology correlation (r > 0.99) with representative waveforms of the 10-s ECG samples were analyzed, assuring that only good quality recordings were included. In addition to these high correlations, SDs of the ECG signal difference between representative waveforms and individual beats expressed morphological instability and ECG noise. In the intra-subject analyses of both individual beats and of 10-s averages, QT interval variability was substantially more strongly related to the ECG noise than to the underlying RR variability. In approximately one-third of the analyzed ECG beats, the prolongation or shortening of the preceding RR interval was followed by the opposite change of the QT interval. In linear regression analyses, underlying RR variability within each 10-s ECG sample explained only 5.7 and 11.1% of QT interval variability in females and males, respectively. On the contrary, the underlying ECG noise contents of the 10-s samples explained 56.5 and 60.1% of the QT interval variability in females and males, respectively. The study concludes that the concept of stable and uniform immediate RR interval effect on the duration of subsequent QT interval duration is highly questionable. Even if only stable beat-to-beat measurements of QT interval are used, the QT interval variability is still substantially influenced by morphological variability and noise pollution of the source ECG recordings. Even when good quality recordings are used, noise contents of the electrocardiograms should be objectively examined in future studies of QT interval variability. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9011003/ /pubmed/35431991 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.863873 Text en Copyright © 2022 Toman, Hnatkova, Šišáková, Smetana, Huster, Barthel, Novotný, Andršová, Schmidt and Malik. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Toman, Ondřej
Hnatkova, Katerina
Šišáková, Martina
Smetana, Peter
Huster, Katharina M.
Barthel, Petra
Novotný, Tomáš
Andršová, Irena
Schmidt, Georg
Malik, Marek
Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability
title Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability
title_full Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability
title_fullStr Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability
title_full_unstemmed Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability
title_short Short-Term Beat-to-Beat QT Variability Appears Influenced More Strongly by Recording Quality Than by Beat-to-Beat RR Variability
title_sort short-term beat-to-beat qt variability appears influenced more strongly by recording quality than by beat-to-beat rr variability
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9011003/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35431991
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.863873
work_keys_str_mv AT tomanondrej shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT hnatkovakaterina shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT sisakovamartina shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT smetanapeter shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT husterkatharinam shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT barthelpetra shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT novotnytomas shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT andrsovairena shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT schmidtgeorg shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability
AT malikmarek shorttermbeattobeatqtvariabilityappearsinfluencedmorestronglybyrecordingqualitythanbybeattobeatrrvariability