These rare conditions can cause heart
attacks |
Doctors
have discovered another hereditary heart fault which could trigger a
fatal heart attack in a young, apparently healthy, patient.
But how common are such illnesses - and how can doctors treat
them?
Many thousands of people in the UK suffer from heart arrhythmias
- and the vast majority of these are harmless.
But doctors still want to check them all out - because a small
number can be dangerous.
Even worse, some of the most deadly can kill without ever giving
a hint as to their presence.
A condition called "Long QT Syndrome" is known to run in
families.
It is caused by a problem in one particular sequence of the
pattern of electrical impulses that drives the heart beat, and can
trigger an irregular heartbeat which could lead to a heart attack.
All this can
happen with little or no warning, often to very young adults during
quite normal exertion, such as a game of football or tennis.
As understanding of Long QT has increased, the UK has set up
special clinics designed to detect those at greatest risk and treat
them either with drugs, or in extreme circumstances, an implantable
defibrillator which will shock their hearts into action should they
suffer cardiac arrest.
Short but deadly?
But a related condition called Short QT is only just coming to
light, which, doctors believe, could be just as deadly.
As the name suggests, it also concerns a fault with a particular
electrical heart rhythm.
It is also
symptomless, and can be fatal.
Researchers in Germany and Italy found one family in which six
members had suffered sudden cardiac death - and many surviving
members showed signs of this fault.
In the US, many members of a single family from Illinois have
been diagnosed with the condition.
Three members of the Hills family, from Collinsville, are
undergoing surgery to implant defibrillators.
Mary Hill said: "I'm just glad this was discovered before
anything more happened in our family - it's odd that we're one of
the first families in the world to be diagnosed with this
condition."
The specialist who spotted the problem, Dr Preben Bjerregaard,
from Saint Louis University Hospital, said that doctors should be on
the lookout for both forms.
"We've known for years that a long QT interval is a hereditary
condition and is dangerous, but the short QT interval also appears
to be hereditary and often exhibits no symptoms at all."
Bigger problem
Professor John Camm, from St George's Hospital in south London,
runs a clinic which specialises in detecting and treating
potentially fatal heart problems such as these.
He says that one of the researchers who discovered "Short QT"
tells him he believes that there may be more people with this form
of dangerous arrhythmia than with the better-known "Long QT".
He said: "We have noticed this short QT interval in some of our
patients in the past, but not really taken much notice of it.
"It is still early days in terms of finding out what it is and
learning a way to manage the condition."
He said implanting defibrillators was a "blunderbuss" approach -
he hoped that drug treatments might offer a solution.
"We don't like to use these devices unless it's absolutely
necessary - for a start, it can be very debillitating to the patient
knowing they have an implanted defibrillator.
"It can be set off by extreme exertion if the heart rate gets too
high - it's like being given a powerful kick in the chest."
But he urged people with arrhythmias not to worry they might be
at risk of sudden death.
"The vast majority of these conditions are completely harmless."