RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Brugada syndrome is the mechanism for sudden unexplained death. The Brugada ECG pattern is found in 2% of Filipinos. There is a knowledge gap on the clinical outcome of these individuals. The clinical profile and 5-year cardiac event rate of individuals with the Brugada ECG pattern were determined in this cohort. METHODS: This is a sub-study of LIFECARE (Life Course Study in Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology), a community based cohort enrolling healthy individuals 20 to 50 years old conducted in 2009-2010. ECGs of all enrollees were screened independently by three cardiologists. The prevalence of the coved Brugada ECG pattern was ascertained, and the 5-year cardiac event rate was determined among those individuals with this pattern. The participants were contacted to determine the occurrence of cardiac events, which included syncope, presyncope, seizures, cardiac arrest and unexplained vehicular accidents. RESULTS: A total of 3072 ECGs were reviewed, and 14 subjects (0.4%) with the coved Brugada ECG pattern were identified. Four had a cardiac event on follow-up at 5 years, but all remained alive. Most of these 14 coved Brugada individuals were healthy and asymptomatic at baseline. CONCLUSION: Cardiac events occurred commonly among initially asymptomatic Filipinos with the coved Brugada ECG pattern. Such patients need to be followed up closely.
RESUMO
We report a case of a man aged 65 years presenting with chronic cough, haemoptysis and intermittent atrial tachyarrhythmias on ECG. On 2D transthoracic echocardiography, an incidental left atrial mass was seen, initially thought to be a thrombus predisposed by intermittent atrial fibrillation. Transoesophageal echocardiography confirmed that this left atrial mass originated from a fixed, non-homogenous, right superior pulmonary vein mass with an extracardiac extension. Because of this finding, a thorough search for a primary focus lead to the discovery of a contiguous posterior mediastinal mass, which was a round cell neoplasm on histology. Management was deemed palliative. Although rare, left-sided cardiac masses should prompt the physician to search for a malignancy in the lung in high-risk patients, as haematogenous spread via the pulmonary vein is a potential mechanism for spread.