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Europace 2003 5(3):251-255; doi:10.1016/S1099-5129(03)00029-1
© 2003 by European Society of Cardiology
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CASE REPORT

Electrocardiographic pattern of Brugada syndrome disclosed by a febrile illness: clinical and therapeutic implications

N. Patruno1, D. Pontillo2, A. Achilli2, G. Ruggeri1 and G. Critelli3

1Department of Cardiology, S. Giuseppe Hospital Albano Laziale, Rome, Italy; 2Department of Cardiology, Belcolle Hospital Viterbo, Italy; 3Department of Cardiology, University of Rome ‘La Sapienza’ Via Ceresio 11, 00199 Rome, Italy

BACKGROUND: Recent studies have identified a direct link between the ionic mechanisms responsible for the electrocardiographic (ECG) pattern of the Brugada syndrome (BS) and the in vitro experimental temperature, pointing to the possibility that some BS patients may display the ECG phenotype only during a febrile state, being in this setting at risk of lethal arrhythmias.

CASE REPORT: A 53-year-old man referred to the emergency room for abdominal pain and fever. The ECG showed dome-shaped ST-segment elevation in V1–V3, as in the typical BS. The personal and family history were unremarkable for syncope and sudden death and physical, laboratory and ultrasound examinations were negative. On day 3, at normal body temperature, the patient's ECG returned to normal and the ECG abnormalities were later reproduced with intravenous flecainide. The patient refused the implantation of a loop recorder and was discharged after 6 days. He has remained asymptomatic during 2 years of follow-up.

CONCLUSIONS: The typical ECG phenotype of BS disclosed by a febrile illness confirms the in vitro experimental data that previously established a correlation between ECG pattern of BS and temperature variations. The clinical and therapeutic implications of these findings are discussed.

Key Words: Asymptomatic Brugada syndrome, fever, sudden death


Correspondence: Giuseppe Critelli, MD, Via Ceresio 11, 00199 Rome, Italy. Tel.: (39) 0649976154; Fax: (39) 064453825; E-mail: giuseppe.critelli{at}uniroma1.it


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