Background: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy carries an increased risk for sudden cardiac death. While pacing therapy reduces the left ventricular outflow tract gradient and improves symptoms in a subgroup of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) patients, its electrophysiological consequences are unknown and were therefore assessed in this prospective study.
Methods and results: Fifteen consecutive HOCM patients were studied and compared with 14 patients without HOCM paced because of sinus bradycardia. ECG intervals were measured before pacemaker implantation and after > or =3 months of DDD pacing in HOCM patients and > or =5 weeks in controls. Both groups showed similar ECG signs of cardiac memory development. In HOCM patients, with baseline QTc 447 +/- 33 ms, cardiac memory development was not associated with any significant changes in ECG intervals. In contrast, baseline repolarization in control patients was significantly prolonged by 6% (QTc 429 +/- 33 vs 454 +/- 46 ms; P < 0.05). Furthermore, in HOCM patients repolarization was 7% shorter during DDD pacing compared to sinus rhythm (JTc 329 +/- 25 vs 353 +/- 21 ms; P < 0.05), despite a significantly prolonged ventricular activation time (QRS duration 155 +/- 16 vs 91 +/- 9 ms; P < 0.01).
Conclusions: Importantly, the development of cardiac memory-induced different repolarization responses depending on baseline structure and electrophysiology. In HOCM patients repolarization was shorter during right ventricular apical pacing than during normal activation despite prolonged activation time.