Case series of Type 1 Brugada pattern provoked by exercise: a role for diagnostic treadmill stress testing
Ojas H Mehta, Angela Ambrosio, Lindsay Burnell, Laura Arbour, Michael J Thibert, Andrew D Krahn, Richard Leather, Martin van Zyl

TL;DR
This paper reports three cases where exercise treadmill testing revealed a Brugada pattern on ECG, suggesting it could be a useful diagnostic tool for Brugada syndrome.
Contribution
The study introduces treadmill exercise testing as a novel diagnostic method for provoking Brugada ECG patterns.
Findings
Three patients showed a Type 1 Brugada pattern during treadmill testing in the early recovery phase.
The Brugada pattern was not present at baseline but appeared after peak exercise.
Exercise treadmill testing may serve as a diagnostic tool for Brugada syndrome.
Abstract
Brugada syndrome (BrS) is a rare cardiovascular condition that can lead to life-threatening arrhythmias. The SCN5A gene, most implicated in heritable BrS, is found in only 20% of those who have the clinical phenotype seen with BrS. Establishing the diagnosis of BrS can be challenging as the electrocardiogram (ECG) pattern that is diagnostic for the syndrome is often transient. Typically, a pharmacological challenge using a Class 1 antiarrhythmic is used to provoke a Type 1 Brugada pattern on ECG that may otherwise be concealed. We describe a case series of three unrelated patients who underwent an exercise treadmill test (ETT) according to standard Bruce protocol. Each patient demonstrated a Type 1 Brugada pattern most apparent in the early recovery phase immediately after peak exercise but not at baseline. This case series highlights the value of ETT as a diagnostic aid for BrS. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmias · ECG Monitoring and Analysis · Ion channel regulation and function
