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1.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-44335

ABSTRACT

Ten patients (aged 0-9 years) with the diagnosis of automatic atrial tachycardia (AAT) from August 1997 to August 2000 were reviewed. Three patients had paroxysmal (repetitive) AAT and the tachycardia was incessant in six (defined as presence of AAT for more than 90% of the time). The type of AAT in one patient was unknown. Four patients presented with congestive heart failure (CHF), one with pre-syncope, one with palpitation, and four were asymptomatic. Six patients (60%) had depressed left ventricular ejection fraction. All patients with CHF had incessant AAT with atrial rate > 220/min and ventricular rate > 200/min at admission. After treatment with antiarrhythmic medications, all patients had adequate control of the AAT (9 had complete elimination of AAT and 1 partial control). Amiodarone (alone, or in combination with digoxin) was effective in 5 of 6 cases (83%), although complete elimination of the AAT was usually delayed (median = 5 days, range 30 minutes to 17 days). Other effective medications were digoxin, digoxin + propranolol and atenolol (all in patients who did not have CHF on presentation). At the time of this report, 3 patients had no AAT off antiarrhythmic medication, 5 patients were still receiving treatment (with good control) and 2 patients died from sepsis during the same admission even though AAT was controlled. All surviving patients had normal ventricular ejection fraction on follow-up. AAT in children is rare, but when it occurs in persistent form at a fast rate, it is usually associated with CHF and is difficult to treat. Amiodarone (+/- digoxin) effectively controls the arrhythmia in the majority of cases, although full effect may take several days. With successful treatment, most patients do well and some can be taken off the medication(s) without recurrence of the arrhythmia.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Age Factors , Anti-Arrhythmia Agents/administration & dosage , Child , Child, Preschool , Cohort Studies , Electrocardiography , Female , Heart Function Tests , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Probability , Prognosis , Risk Assessment , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors , Survival Analysis , Tachycardia, Ectopic Atrial/diagnosis , Thailand , Treatment Outcome
2.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-39498

ABSTRACT

The etiologies of complete heart block in thirty-one children (mean age 5.5 +/- 5.2 years, range 0-14 years) diagnosed at King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital between 1990-2001 were reviewed. Three main groups of patients were identified: 1) patients who presented in utero or in the newborn period (congenital heart block, n = 6), 2) patients who had complete heart block after cardiac surgery (postoperative heart block, n = 10), and 3) children outside the newborn period with a new diagnosis of complete heart block unrelated to cardiac surgery (unknown etiology, n = 15). Among 15 patients in the last group, 5 were asymptomatic (or minimally symptomatic) with complete heart block unexpectedly found. These patients probably had previously undetected congenital heart block. Two patients had complete heart block associated with mild viral illness, but no bradycardia-related symptom. The etiology for heart block in these 2 patients was unknown. Eight patients probably had recent onset heart block because of new bradycardia-related symptoms, or a previously documented normal heart rate. All patients in this group were female (mean age 4.3 +/- 4.3 years, median 3.5 years). All were diagnosed between August and January, and the majority (75%) had a history of non-specific viral illness in the preceding 2 weeks. Seven patients (87.5%) were acutely symptomatic. Syncope and/or seizure were the most common presenting symptoms. Left ventricular systolic dysfunction was found in only one patient. The etiology of complete heart block in these patients probably was an acute viral myocarditis that preferentially affected the conduction system. Two of these eight patients had complete recovery of the atrioventricular conduction. The rest had no improvement or had only partial recovery and subsequently underwent permanent cardiac pacemaker insertion.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Age Distribution , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Heart Block/diagnosis , Hospitals, Urban , Humans , Incidence , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Pacemaker, Artificial , Prognosis , Registries , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Sex Distribution , Survival Rate , Thailand/epidemiology
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