Cardiology Research and Practice | 2021

Clinical and Prognostic Significance of Idiopathic Left Bundle-Branch Block in Young Adults

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Aims LBBB is rare in healthy young adults, and its long-term prognosis is uncertain. Methods 56 subjects (aged <50 years), in whom an LBBB was discovered by chance in the absence of clinical and echocardiographic evidence of heart disease, were collected in a multicenter registry. Results 69% were males. Mean age at the time of discovery of LBBB was 37\u2009±\u200911 years. Mean QRS duration was 149\u2009±\u200917\u2009m sec and 35% had left axis deviation. All patients had a normal echocardiogram, except for left ventricular dyssynchrony; 37 patients underwent coronary angiography (30) or myocardial scintigraphy during effort Eriksson and Wilhelmsen (2005), and in all cases obstructive coronary artery disease was excluded. In 2/30 patients who underwent coronary angiography, an anomalous origin of the CX artery from the right coronary sinus was found. Thirty patients underwent cardiac magnetic resonance; in 60% it was normal, while in 40% it revealed late enhancement, which in 33% was localized in the basal septum, suggesting fibrosis of the left bundle branch. During follow-up (12+/10 years, median 10 years) no sudden death occurred. At the end of follow-up, all patients were alive, except for one who suffered accidental death. Two patients (3.5%) underwent PM implantation owing to syncope. The echocardiogram at the end of follow-up revealed LV dysfunction in only one patient. Conclusions In young adults without apparent heart disease, LBBB is a heterogeneous condition. In the vast majority of cases, the prognosis is good and no ventricular dysfunction occurs over time. However, as only 18% of our patients were aged >60 years at the end of follow-up, we cannot establish the prognosis in older age-groups.

Volume 2021
Pages None
DOI 10.1155/2021/6677806
Language English
Journal Cardiology Research and Practice

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