Brugada syndrome and reduced right ventricular outflow tract conduction reserve: a final common pathway?

Brugada syndrome (BrS) was first described as a primary electrical disorder predisposing to the risk of sudden cardiac death and characterized by right precordial lead ST elevation. Early description of right ventricular structural abnormalities and of right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) conduction delay in BrS patients set the stage for the current controversy over the pathophysiology underlying the syndrome: channelopathy or cardiomyopathy; repolarization or depolarization. This review examines the current understanding of the BrS substrate, its genetic and non-genetic basis, theories of pathophysiology, and the clinical implications thereof. We propose that the final common pathway for BrS could be viewed as a disease of 'reduced RVOT conduction reserve'.

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TitleBrugada syndrome and reduced right ventricular outflow tract conduction reserve: a final common pathway?
Date2021-03-14
Issue nameEuropean heart journal
Issue numberv42.11:1073-1081
DOI10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa1051
PubMed33421051
AuthorsBehr ER, Ben-Haim Y, Ackerman MJ, Krahn AD & Wilde AAM
KeywordsBrugada syndrome, Depolarization, Genetics, Right ventricular outflow tract
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