RESUMO
Brugada syndrome is an inherited autosomal dominant-type disease characterized by ST-segment abnormalities and increased fatal ventricular tachyarrhythmias. We hereby present a 57-years-old patient with no symptoms or history of cardiovascular disease, diagnosed with febrile respiratory infection (39â). Electrocardiographic (ECG) findings were typical of Brugada-like type I syndrome that gradually turned to Brugada type II and III, following fever remission, and finally became normal. Other clinical evaluation tests (echocardiographic evaluation, treadmill stress test, Holter ECG, procainamide provocation test) did not relate to Brugada syndrome.
RESUMO
Oxidative stress has been shown to increase after acute myocardial infarction and during coronary reperfusion. Allopurinol inhibits xanthine oxidase, an enzyme involved in reperfusion injury. In this study, 40 patients with ST elevation myocardial infarction and symptoms' onset 3-12 h, who underwent primary coronary intervention, were administered either allopurinol (loading dose 400 mg followed by 100 mg for 1 month--group A, 21 patients), or placebo (group B). Allopurinol resulted in a more effective ST-E recovery (P<0.05 for all comparisons) and lower peak values of troponin I (P=0.04), CPK (P=0.01) and CK-MB (P=0.03). After 1-month follow-up period, 13% lower incidence of major adverse cardiac events (P=0.002) was also observed in group A, whereas no significant differences in the EF were detected between the groups studied. In our study population, allopurinol administration was beneficial concerning tissue reperfusion, myocardial injury and clinical outcomes.