RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Right ventricular outflow tract ventricular tachycardia (RVOT-VT), arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy/dysplasia (ARVC/ARVD), and Brugada syndrome (BrS) were characterized by arrhythmias originating in the right ventricle, and the pathophysiologic mechanism underlying these arrhythmias has not been fully understood. METHODS: This study consisted of 40 subjects, including 20 patients with RVOT-VT, 10 patients with BrS, and 10 ARVD patients. The parameters on the signal-averaged electrocardiography (ECG) and the frequency components recorded from the wavelet-transformed ECG were compared between the three groups. Late potentials were positive in none of the patients with RVOT-VT, seven of the patients with BrS, and all of ARVD patients. RESULTS: In Brugada and ARVD patients, the power of high-frequency components (80-150 Hz) was developed to a greater extent than in RVOT-VT patients. In the power analysis of the high-frequency components between BrS and ARVD, the frequency showing the greatest power was significantly higher in ARVD patients than that in BrS patients (145.4 ± 27.9 Hz vs 81.7 ± 19.9 Hz, P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: High-frequency components were developed in ARVD and BrS, but not in RVOT-VT. The frequency levels showing high power by wavelet analysis obviously differ between ARVD and BrS. Wavelet analysis may provide new insight into unsolved mechanisms in arrhythmogenic right heart disease.