Asatryan Babken, Barth Andreas S
Department of Cardiology, Inselspital, Bern University Hospital, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Front Cardiovasc Med. 2023 Jan 4;9:1010748. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2022.1010748. eCollection 2022.
Inherited Arrhythmia Syndromes (IAS) including long QT and Brugada Syndrome, are characterized by life-threatening arrhythmias in the absence of apparent structural heart disease and are caused by pathogenic variants in genes encoding cardiac ion channels or associated proteins. Studies of large pedigrees of families affected by IAS have demonstrated incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity. Biological sex is one of several factors that have been recognized to modulate disease severity in IAS. There is a growing body of evidence linking sex hormones to the susceptibility to arrhythmias, yet, many sex-specific disease aspects remain underrecognized as female sex and women with IAS are underinvestigated and findings from male-predominant cohorts are often generalized to both sexes with minimal to no consideration of relevant sex-associated differences in prevalence, disease manifestations and outcome. In this review, we highlight current knowledge of sex-related biological differences in normal cardiac electrophysiology and sex-associated factors that influence IAS phenotypes.
遗传性心律失常综合征(IAS),包括长QT综合征和Brugada综合征,其特征是在没有明显结构性心脏病的情况下出现危及生命的心律失常,并且由编码心脏离子通道或相关蛋白的基因中的致病变异引起。对受IAS影响的大家族进行的研究表明,其外显率不完全且表现度可变。生物性别是已被认识到的调节IAS疾病严重程度的几个因素之一。越来越多的证据将性激素与心律失常易感性联系起来,然而,许多性别特异性的疾病方面仍未得到充分认识,因为女性和患有IAS的女性研究不足,而且以男性为主的队列研究结果往往不加区分地推广到两性,而很少或根本不考虑患病率、疾病表现和预后方面与性别相关的差异。在这篇综述中,我们重点介绍了正常心脏电生理中与性别相关的生物学差异以及影响IAS表型的性别相关因素的现有知识。