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Sudden Cardiac Death in Children & Young Adults
Rebecca A. Steinmann, RN, APN, MS, CEN, CCRN, CCNS Clinical Educator, Emergency Department Children’s Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Il
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Sudden Cardiac Death Abrupt, unexpected death due to cardiac causes in a person with known or unknown cardiac disease in whom no previously diagnosed fatal conditions is apparent 75% of deaths are due to an abnormal heart rhythm VT/VF
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Background young people die suddenly and unexpectedly from cardiac dysrhythmias/month Average age of collapse: 17 years of age Most die from congenital/hereditary structural or functional cardiovascular abnormalities
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Causes of SCD in the Young
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Sudden Cardiac Death Anatomic Substrate Trigger Electrical instability
Underlying structural/functional abnormality Trigger Transient in blood flow to the heart Systemic factors BP, O2, electrolyte imbalances Altered levels of hormones and chemical transmitters Toxic effects of drugs Electrical instability
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Objectives Identify four common causes of
sudden cardiac arrest in children and young adults. Discuss the identification and management of patient’s with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Describe the identification and management of patient’s with Long QT Syndrome.
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Epidemiology Affects % of population Most common cause of SCD in athletes Most common cause of SCD in individuals < 30 years of age Symptoms commonly present during 2nd decade of life > 50% of cases inherited Autosomal dominant genetic disorder
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Epidemiology Incidence of SCD 4-6%/year in children and adolescents 2-4%/year in adults Most episodes of SCD occur at rest or with mild exertion Progressive disorder that worsens over time
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Pathophysiology Disorganization of muscle fibers LV hypertrophy Most commonly the septum just below the aortic valve outflow tract obstruction
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Pathophysiology LV stiff impaired filling Mitral valve dysfunction Mitral regurgitation Cardiac ischemia and malignant arrhythmias VF (80% of cases)
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Presentation Most patients are asymptomatic until a cardiac event occurs SCD Syncope/pre-syncope (15-25%) Dizziness* Angina* Palpitations Dyspnea* (90% of cases) Systolic murmur
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Diagnosis ECG LV hypertrophy, ST-T wave abnormalities CXR: cardiomegaly
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Diagnosis 2-Dimensional echocardiogram
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Patient Management Medications Beta-blockers Calcium Channel blockers Antidysrhythmics: Amiodarone Pacemaker ICD
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Patient Management Septal ablation (ethanol ablation) Creates small septal AMI Left ventricular myomectomy
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Patient Management Family CPR Evaluation of first-degree relatives Avoid inotropes, nitrates, strenuous activity
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Coronary Artery Anomalies
2nd leading cause of SCD in young athletes Accounts for % of all congenital heart defects 85% of cases present with signs of CHF within 1-2 months of age 90% mortality in 1st year of life
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Coronary Artery Anomalies
Pathophysiology Results from an embryologic “glitch” in which the LCA arises from an abnormal origin Pulmonary artery, coronary sinuses
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Coronary Artery Anomalies
Pathophysiology Left ventricle is perfused with desaturated blood Myocardial ischemia with activity Anterolateral infarct in neonate VF Collateral circulation may develop between right & left coronary artery
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Coronary Artery Anomalies
Presentation Neonate/infant Poor feeding heart rate respiratory rate Failure to thrive Older children/young adults often asymptomatic Vigorous exercise myocardial ischemia VF SCD
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Coronary Artery Anomalies
Diagnosis ECG: Anterolateral infarct/ischemia
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Coronary Artery Anomalies
Diagnosis 2-Dimensional echocardiogram with Doppler color flow mapping TEE MRI Angiography
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Coronary Artery Anomalies
Management Surgical revascularization to a 2 coronary artery system
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Ion Channelopathies Long QT syndrome Brugada syndrome
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Long QT Syndrome Disorder characterized by prolongation of the QT interval VT (torsades)
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Long QT Syndrome Congenital Acquired long QT:
Occurs in 1:3,000-5,000 individuals Males have a higher rate of cardiac events Leading cause of SCD in young females Linked to 5% of SIDS cases Acquired long QT: Scarring Medications
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Long QT Syndrome Pathophysiology Mutations in cardiac ion channels
Overload of positively charged ions in the myocardial cells during repolarization Prolonged recovery from excitation increases the likelihood of a premature beat initiating a reentry rhythm VT (torsades de pointes) VF
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Long QT Syndrome Diagnosis/Presentation Symptomatic (60%)
Syncope adrenergic arousal Intense emotions (42%) Vigorous physical exercise (41%) Awakening (19%) Swimming (15%) Auditory stimuli (8%) Seizures Palpitations
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Long QT Syndrome Diagnosis/Presentation Asymptomatic (40%)
Usually diagnosed after a cardiac event has occurred Syncope Sudden Cardiac Death
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Long QT Syndrome Diagnosis: 12 Lead ECG
QTc > 0.46 seconds in child < 15 years QTc > 0.45 seconds in adult male QTc > 0.46 seconds in adult female T wave alternans QTc = __QT__ √RR
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Long QT Syndrome
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Long QT Syndrome Patient Management: Beta-blockers
High thoracic left sympathectomy Implanted cardiac defibrillator
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Long QT Syndrome Patient Management:
Avoidance of QT prolonging drugs ( Anesthetics Asthma medications Antihistamines Antibiotics Antidysrhythmics Antipsychotics Catecholamines Avoiding hypokalemia
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Long QT Syndrome Patient Management: CPR
Family education: CPR Testing of first-degree relatives
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Brugada Syndrome Congenital genetic mutation
Occurs in 5:10,000 individuals Autosomal dominant transmission Endemic in Southeast Asia 2nd leading cause of death in males < 40 years of age with structurally normal hearts VF/SCD usually occurs at night or rest
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Brugada Syndrome Dysfunction of sodium ion channels
Polymorphic VT VF Supraventricular arrhythmias in 20% of cases Lethal dysrhythmias associated with Febrile illness Hypokalemia Myocardial ischemia Bradycardia
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Brugada Syndrome Usually diagnosed after an aborted SCD event or syncope Characteristic ECG findings Coved ST segment elevation in V1-V3 followed by negative T wave
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Brugada Syndrome Patient Management: Pacer/ICD
Pharmacologic agents have proven largely ineffectual Quinidine? Avoidance of medications that induce Brugada-like ECG patterns Family CPR
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Commotio cordis Epidemiology
Occurs most commonly in males < 20 years Majority < 12 years of age Why are children more vulnerable? Narrow chest cage Undeveloped chest wall muscles Greater compliance of chest wall
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Commotio cordis Epidemiology
62% of events occurred at organized sporting events Baseball Ice hockey Football 50% suffer immediate collapse 84% fatalities
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Commotio cordis Pathophysiology
Impact directly over the heart during the peak of the T wave VF
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Commotio cordis Presentation Sudden collapse after impact to the chest
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Commotio cordis Patient Management
Outcome directly related to length of time to defibrillation AED
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Commotio cordis-type presentation
Tasers??
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Aortic Rupture Epidemiology Congenital abnormality of
the connective tissues Marfan’s syndrome Vascular Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (ED IV)
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Aortic Rupture Pathophysiology Collagen defect in walls of vessels
Mechanical stress dilatation of the wall of the aorta rupture Valves may also be affected
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Aortic Rupture: Marfan’s Syndrome
Physical findings: Characteristic physical findings Long lanky frame Hypermobile joints Funnel chest Scoliosis Thin narrow face Small lower jaw Hypotonia Near-sightedness
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Aortic Rupture: Vascular Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS IV)
Physical findings Thin, transparent skin Prominent venous patterns on chest and abdomen Easy bruising Only 16% diagnosed before presentation with vascular complication
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Aortic Rupture Diagnosis: CXR Echocardiogram Genetic testing
Fibrilin-1 mutation (Marfan’s)
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Aortic Rupture Patient Management Beta-blockers
Minimize dilatation of the aortic root Yearly evaluation of aortic root by echocardiogram Surgical repair of dilated aorta
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Miscellaneous causes of SCD
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome Incidence: 0.1% of population Embryonic “glitch” Risk of SCD 0-4% Accessory AV pathway that permits rapid heart rates Reentry tachycardia A. Fib/flutter (11-38%)
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Miscellaneous causes of SCD
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome Palpitations most common sign Heart rates in the range of 250 are common A Fib/flutter may degenerate to VF
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome Characteristic 12 Lead ECG Short PR, widened QRS, delta wave
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome Management: Stable: Amiodarone, Procainamide, Over-drive pacing Unstable: Cardioversion Long-term: Medication therapy to control rate Radiofrequency ablation of accessory pathway
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Arrythmogenic RV dysplasia Progressive cardiomyopathy characterized by partial replacement of the RV myocardium with fibrous/fatty tissue Patchy distribution
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Arrythmogenic RV dysplasia Incidence 1:5,000 persons Risk of SCD 2%/year 30-50% of cases familial disorder Autosomal-dominant inheritance Viral??
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Arrythmogenic RV dysplasia Characteristics Thinning and enlargement of the RV wall Poor RV contractility
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Arrythmogenic RV dysplasia Characteristics Sustained monomorphic or polymorphic VT with LBBB morphology VF
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Arrythmogenic RV dysplasia Presentation: Palpitations Syncope SCD Congestive heart failure
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Arrythmogenic RV dysplasia Diagnosis: ECG Epsilon wave V1-V3 Widening of QRS in V1-V3 T wave inversion in anterior leads 2-D echocardiogram MRI
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Arrythmogenic RV dysplasia Patient Management: Antiarrythmic agents ICD Catheter ablation Ventriculostomy Management of CHF
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Kawasaki disease Leading cause of acquired heart disease in children < 5 years of age (U.S.) An acute, self-limiting, multisystem disorder characterized by microvascular inflammation Unknown etiology Thought to be infectious or autoimmune
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Kawasaki disease 15-25% of untreated patients develop cardiovascular sequelae Coronary artery aneurysms thrombosis, MI, sudden death Risk of SCD highest 4-8 weeks after onset of symptoms
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Kawasaki disease Fever > 38.5 C. (101.3 F.) for 5 or more days 5 days + 4 of the 5 following clinical signs: Changes in extremities Edema, erythema, generalized desquamation
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Kawasaki disease Bilateral conjunctivitis Not associated with exudates Polymorphous rash
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Kawasaki disease Changes in lips and oral cavity Cervical lymphadenopathy with one node > 1.5 cm
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Kawasaki disease Supportive care (fluids, antipyretics) Anti-inflammatory therapy Aspirin: inflammation, lowers fever, prevents blood clots Intravenous immune gamma globulin (IVIG) Treatment within first 10 days of illness reduces rate of cardiac sequelae from 20-25% to 2-4%
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Acute Coronary Syndrome High-risk: Hemoglobinopathies: Sickle cell anemia Leukemia/cancer survivors Congenital heart disease/repairs Familial history of hyperlipidemia Smokers Obesity Hypertension Diabetics
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Miscellaneous Causes of SCD
Coronary Artery Disease Acute Coronary Syndrome Occlusion of coronary artery myocardial ischemia development of ventricular dysrhythmias Diagnosis: ECG, cardiac enzymes Management: “MONA” Adjunctive medications Reperfusion strategies
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Warning Signs Exertional syncope Near-syncope, dizziness
Excessive, unexpected, unexplained dyspnea or fatigue associated with exercise Exertional chest pain/discomfort Past detection of heart murmur with systolic BP Family history of premature death < 40 years
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Screening Complete and careful personal and family history
Physical exam Precordial auscultation Lying and standing Assessment of femoral pulses Brachial BP
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Discussion/Questions
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