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a Department of
Neurology, New York University Medical Center, 550 First Avenue, New
York, NY 10016, USA, b Department of Neurology, University of
Erlangen-Nuremberg, Schwabachanlage 6, D-91054 Erlangen, Germany
Correspondence to: Professor Max J Hilz, University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Department of Neurology, Schwabachanlage 6, D - 91054 Erlangen, Germany. Telephone 0049 9131 85 44 44; fax 0049 9131 85 43 28.
Received 4 April 1997 and in revised form 6 March 1998;
Accepted 16 March 1998
OBJECTIVE
Patients
with familial dysautonomia have an increased risk of sudden death. In
some patients with familial dysautonomia, sympathetic cardiac
dysfunction is indicated by prolongation of corrected QT (QTc)
interval, especially during stress tests. As many patients do not
tolerate physical stress, additional indices are needed to predict
autonomic risk. In familial dysautonomia there is a reduction of both
sympathetic neurons and peripheral small nerve fibres which mediate
temperature perception. Consequently, quantitative thermal perception
test results might correlate with QTc values. If this assumption is
correct, quantitative thermotesting could contribute to predicting
increased autonomic risk.
METHODS
To test this
hypothesis, QTc intervals were determined in 12 male and eight female
patients with familial dysautonomia, aged 10 to 41 years (mean 21.7 (SD
10.1) years), in supine and erect positions and postexercise and
correlated with warm and cold perception thresholds assessed at six
body sites using a Thermotest.
RESULTS
Due to
orthostatic presyncope, six patients were unable to undergo erect and
postexercise QTc interval assessment. The QTc interval was prolonged
(>440 ms) in two patients when supine and in two additional patients
when erect and postexercise. Supine QTc intervals correlated
significantly with thermal threshold values at the six body sites and
with the number of sites with abnormal thermal perception (Spearman's
rank correlation p<0.05). Abnormal Thermotest results were more
frequent in the four patients with QTc prolongation and the six
patients with intolerance to stress tests.
CONCLUSION
The results
suggest that impaired thermal perception correlates with cardiac
sympathetic dysfunction in patients with familial dysautonomia. Thus
thermotesting may provide an alternative, albeit indirect, means of
assessing sympathetic dysfunction in autonomic disorders.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. J. Hilz, F. B. Axelrod, A. Bickel, B. Stemper, M. Brys, G. Wendelschafer-Crabb, and W. R. Kennedy Assessing function and pathology in familial dysautonomia: assessment of temperature perception, sweating and cutaneous innervation Brain, September 1, 2004; 127(9): 2090 - 2098. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M J Hilz, F B Axelrod, U Haertl, C M Brown, and B Stemper Transcranial Doppler sonography during head up tilt suggests preserved central sympathetic activation in familial dysautonomia J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry, May 1, 2002; 72(5): 657 - 660. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. J. Hilz, B. Stemper, and F. B. Axelrod Sympathetic skin response differentiates hereditary sensory autonomic neuropathies III and IV Neurology, May 1, 1999; 52(8): 1652 - 1652. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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