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Tests
* Tests marked with a *
are non-invasive.
Because the conditions that
cause SADS can be inherited it is important that, if you are a blood
relative in the immediate family of someone who has died of SADS,
you are evaluated for signs of these diseases, particularly the ion
channelopathies. There may also have been
other sudden or suspicious deaths in your
family, including cot deaths, suggesting that there may be an underlying
inheritable condition. Below, we explain
what is involved in the evaluation and describe
the tests you may need to have.
Medical
history
It is vital that a clear history of
the victim and his or her death is established, using the
family's and friends' recollections as well as the reports of the coroner,
pathologist, GP and police. For example,
fits brought on by exercise can be due to
an underlying channelopathy such as LQTS or CPVT, or a sudden cardiac
death during sleep may have been
caused by sodium channel LQTS or Brugada Syndrome.
It is also important to find out about any medications and any potentially
dangerous drugs that the person may have taken before they died. Your
doctor may ask you if you have ever had symptoms such as blackouts or
palpitations as these may suggest underlying
heart disease.
Medical
examination
A medical examination may help to
discover if there is an inheritable structural heart
disease in the family. For example, if there is mitral valve prolapse with
leakage from the valve this will cause a
'murmur' that a doctor can hear through a stethoscope.
Your doctor may suggest that you have some
of the tests we describe below.
Figure
4: ECG (electrocardiogram)
Electrical leads from the ECG machine
are taped to the chest, legs and
arms and a recording is made of the
electrical activity of the heart. |
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ECG
(electrocardiogram) *
This is the most basic test. It
involves taping electrical leads onto your legs, arms and
chest to take readings of the electrical activity of your heart. These are
prined out onto a piece of paper for
the doctor to examine. If the first ECG does not show any
sign of a channelopathy, the test can be repeated later.
Signal
averaged ECG *
This is an ECG that adds together the
electrical readings from at least 250 heartbeats
so that any very subtle variations can be seen - for example if the
electrical impulses in the heart are being
conducted more slowly. It is useful for diagnosing
Brugada Syndrome, PCCD or ARVC.
Figure 5: Echocardiogram
The operator puts some clear gel on
your chest and then places an
ultrasound probe on it. The probe sends
ultrasound beams into your body and
their reflections are detected and used to generate images of the
heart. You can see different parts of
your heart on a screen as the probe
is moved around on your chest.
The test is similar to the ultrasound
scan that is used to examine a
pregnant woman's unborn baby. It
is completely painless. |
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Echocardiogram
*
(Also called an 'echo'.)
This test uses ultrasound
waves to look at the structure of the heart. It is useful for people
whose ECG shows changes that could be caused either by a channelopathy
or by uninherited heart disease that has damaged the heart - for example
a previous heart attack that you may not have even been aware of. An
echocardiogram can also detect inheritable
conditions such as cardiomyopathy and
mitral valve prolapse.
Figure 6: Exercise test.
Electrical leads from the ECG machine are taped to your body and you are
monitored while you exercise either
on an exercise bike or treadmill. If you are having a 'cardiopulmonary exercise test', your doctor will ask you to
breathe in and out of a special piece of equipment
while you are doing the exercise, in order to monitor how efficiently your
body uses oxygen. |
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Exercise
test *
(Also called an Exercise ECG.)
This test is the same as the
ECG described on page 16 but is recorded before, during
and after a period of time spent exercising on a treadmill or an exercise
bike. This allows the doctor to examine any
changes in the electrical patterns that occur
with exercise, and analyse any abnormalities. This test is particularly
useful in detecting some of the
features that are characteristic of LQTS or CPVT.
Cardiopulmonary
exercise test
Some hospitals may also ask you to do
a cardiopulmonary exercise test. This test analyses
the efficiency of the heart muscle by measuring the amounts of oxygen
your body uses during exercise. You will be
asked to breathe into special equipment
while you are exercising. If the efficiency of your heart is low, this may
suggest that you have cardiomyopathy
(inefficient pumping action of the heart).
Figure 7: Holter
The Holter monitor is attached by 4 or 6 electrical leads
to your body. It monitors your
heart's electrical activity over
a period of time. |
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Holter *
The Holter is a recording
device that comes in two different forms: a
small portable tape recorder (like a
walkman), or a small digital device
the shape of a pager. You
wear the device on a belt round your
waist. Four or six ECG leads from the
device are taped to your chest. The
device records the electrical
activity of your heart for 24 to 48
hours, or for up to 7 days if a
digital one is used. The doctor can
then analyse theelectrical activity and rhythm of your
heart to find out if you haveany arrhythmias (for example, the arrhythmias
typical of LQTS andCPVT), or some of the other features
characteristic of LQTS.
Cardiomemo
and event recorder *
These are more sophisticated versions
of the basic Holter. Whenever you have an attack
of symptoms, you can activate the device to record your heart's rhythm.
(You can also do this with the digital
Holter.) The advantage of the cardiomemo is that
it doesn't have any leads, so you can just place it on your chest when you
get symptoms, without having to put
any leads in position.
RevealŠ
device
When it is difficult to assess or
record a symptom because it only happens infrequently
- as with blackouts - a RevealŠ device can be used. The device, which
is the size of a packet of chewing gum, is placed under the skin at the
left shoulder. You will need to go
into hospital as a day case to have this done. A small cut
about 2 cm long (just under one inch) is made and the device is inserted.
The device monitors the heart's
rhythm and can record any abnormal events that it is programmed
to detect. If anything happens, a small box with a button can also be
placed on the surface of the skin over the
RevealŠ device. The device may then be
activated by pressing the button, causing it to record the preceding 15
minutes of the heart's activity. The
device can then be 'interrogated' by a computer at the hospital
and the doctor can examine the recording. The device has a battery that
can last up to two years if necessary.
Provocation
tests (Ajmaline, flecainide and adenosine tests)
You may be asked to have this test if your doctor suspects Brugada
Syndrome. While you are having an ECG
test you will be given an injection of ajmaline or flecainide
(antiarrhythmic drugs). The test may show changes on the ECG that are
typical of one of the channelopathies.
A fine plastic tube is
inserted into a vein at the front of your elbow. The drug is injected
over a short period of time (5-10 minutes) and you will be monitored for
20 minutes or a few hours afterwards,
depending on the drug used. There is, however,
a risk in 1 in 200 Brugada Syndrome carriers or their immediate blood
relatives of causing a potentially
life-threatening arrhythmia during the injection. The
test is therefore always performed with appropriate facilities to protect
patients from this risk. Ajmaline is
preferable as it lasts a shorter period of time in the circulation.
Adenosine (another
short-acting chemical) is given under the same circumstances if
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome (WPW) is considered a possible diagnosis.
Cardiac
Magnetic Resonance (CMR) scan *
This is a special kind of scan used
to examine the structure of the heart and the nature
of its muscle. It uses a Magnetic Resonance scanner that creates intense
fluctuating magnetic fields around your body
while you are inside the scanner. This
generates the signals that make up the pictures produced. It may be useful for
detecting the presence of fat and scarring
in the heart muscle that is associated with
ARVC.
Other tests
Coronary
angiography and electrophysiological study (EPS)
Depending on the results of the above
tests, your doctor may suggest that you have
other tests such as coronary angiography or an electrophysiological study
(EPS). Both these tests are performed in an
X-ray laboratory that allows the body and
any medical tools (such as cardiac catheter tubes or pacing wires) to be
seen using an X-ray camera. You will
be asked to lie down on a special moving table and
will be given a local anaesthetic in your groin. The doctor will then
place fine tubes, called cardiac
catheters or electrodes, into blood vessels in your groin. These
are gently passed through to the heart. During
coronary angiography the coronary arteries (the arteries that supply blood
to the heart muscle) are injected with a dye
to reveal any furring or blockages - coronary
artery disease. (The ECG changes that are characteristic of Brugada
Syndrome or LQTS can sometimes be caused by
coronary artery disease.)
An EPS (electrophysiological
study) involves placing electrical leads inside the heart
to analyse its electrical properties and induce arrhythmias. It may be
useful in diagnosing
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome (WPW) and PCCD and deciding on
what treatment to give people with Brugada Syndrome. If the extra pathway
seen in WPW is detected at EPS it can be
treated there and then by 'burning' it away
using high frequency radio waves. This procedure is called 'RF ablation'.
There are other tests that may be used to
provoke ECG features in LQTS such as 'cold
pressor tests'. A stimulus such as placing your hands in ice-cold water
can bring out the ECG features of the
condition. This does not appear to increase significantly
the likelihood of making a diagnosis but is still used at some centres.
Figure 8: The tilt table
test
The tilt table test involves monitoring the ECG, pulse and blood pressure
while you are lying flat on a table,
then when the table is tilted to 60-75 degrees, and then lying flat again. |
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Tilt-table
testing
Tilt-table testing is used
to identify other common conditions that can cause blackouts - such as
Vasovagal Syndrome (see technical
terms) or simple fainting - that tend
to particularly affect young women and girls but have a very low risk of
causing sudden death. These symptoms are
very similar to the symptoms of more rare
and potentially life-threatening conditions like the channelopathies, so
it is important to discover the cause
of the blackouts so that the doctor can give appropriate
treatment. While you lie flat on a table, your blood pressure, pulse and
ECG are monitored. The table is then tilted
to an angle of 60 to 75 degrees and monitoring
is continued. If nothing happens, a spray of a substance called GTN is
given under your tongue as a stimulus and
you will be monitored for another 10-15 minutes. The table will then be
returned to the flat position and the leads disconnected.
The whole test takes around 45 minutes. If your blood pressure falls
at the same time as you suffer your usual
symptoms, this means that you have Vasovagal
Syndrome or a related condition.
Genetic
testing
In most of
the inherited conditions known to cause SADS, mutations of specific
genes
have been detected and are thought to cause a specific disease. So in
principle, if we could identify these mutations, we would be able to make
a diagnosis
in any
DNA sample including any obtained from SADS victims at their
autopsy or from their relatives who have given blood. Unfortunately this
cannot be
done at the
moment because we don't have complete knowledge of all the genes
involved in any condition. For example, 7 in every 10 people known to have
LQTS
have mutations of known identified genes. Also, many variations in the DNA
code
are found in a large number of people and do not necessarily cause any
disease. Many families with LQTS have mutations specific to them
('private'
mutations)
which can also make it difficult to decide whether it is the mutation that
is
causing the disease or not. As research progresses, more genes will be
identified
and there
will be better tools to decide whether the impact of a mutation
causes
a disease.
* Tests marked with a *
are
non-invasive.
'Non-invasive' means that it
does not involve penetrating the skin or body.
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Cardiac
Risk in the Young - CRY is a charity started in 1995 to minimise
the incidence and impact of sudden cardiac death in the young. CRY
aims to do this by raising awareness of the conditions that can
lead to sudden death and by providing support and information to
families who have suffered a loss. If you would like more
information please go to the CRY
Web site. If
you would like to talk to someone who can help you please go the
the support
pages |

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