Step wise Strategy of Using Short‐ and Long‐Term Heart Rate Variability for Risk Stratification After Myocardial Infarction

Abstract
Independent of other established risk factors, depressed heart rate variability (HRV) has been shown to be a powerful predictor of cardiac events after MI. Unfortunately, the need of 24-hour ECG recording and subsequent laborious editing of Holter data limits the clinical use of long-term HRV. In order to perform post-MI risk stratification more efficiently, we evaluated the value of short-term HRV estimates for preselection of patients who might benefit from long-term HRV assessment. Two measures were assessed from 24-hour ambulatory ECGs recorded in 729 survivors of acute MI prior to hospital discharge. In addition to a complete 24-hour HRV index, a standard deviation of normal-to-normal RR intervals (SDNN) was obtained from the first stationary and ectopic free 5-minute segment of the Holter recording. Predictive power (relation between positive predictive accuracy and sensitivity) of a complete 24-hour HRV index in identifying patients who suffered from cardiac mortality or arrhythmic events during a 2-year follow-up was compared to the predictive power of assessing the 24-hour HRV index limited to 50%, 40%, or 20% of patients with the lowest values of 5-minute SDNN. The HRV index was significantly lower in patients who died (19 +/- 11 units) or had an arrhythmic event (AE) (18 +/- 11 units) compared to those who survived without an event (28 +/- 10 resp. 27 +/- 11 units; P < 0.001). Similarly, 5-minute SDNN was significantly lower in patients who died (25 +/- 12 ms) or suffered an AE (26 +/- 13 ms) compared to survivors (40 +/- 19 ms resp. 39 +/- 19 ms; P < 0.001). When limited to patients with depressed 5-minute SDNN, assessment of the HRV index performed better than 5-minute SDNN alone in positive prediction of cardiac events. Preselected assessment of the lowest HRV index in 50% to 20% of the total population yielded a 2-year cardiac event prediction rate as high as analysis of the HRV index in all patients. Long-term HRV assessment for risk stratification after MI in patients preselected by depressed short-term SDNN is safe and efficient, and allows a practical identification of patients with the highest likelihood of cardiac events during long-term follow-up.

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