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Sex and race differences in QRS duration

  • Katerina Hnatkova
  • , Peter Smetana
  • , Ondrej Toman
  • , Georg Schmidt
  • , Marek Malik
  • National Heart and Lung Institute
  • Faculty of Medicine of Masaryk University Brno and University Hospital
  • Wilhelminenspital

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

49 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aims: The study investigated healthy subjects to study sex and race differences in QRS durations and the dependency of QRS durations on heart rates and other physiologic correlates. Methods and results: QRS duration and its heart rate dependency were evaluated in 420 615 electrocardiograms obtained in 523 healthy subjects including 111 females of African origin, 130 Caucasian females, 125 males of African origin, and 129 Caucasian males. The distributions of QRS/RR slopes and QRS durations at RR intervals of 1 and 0.5 s were compared between sex- and race-defined subgroups. At high heart rates, QRS duration was increased in ∼35% of all subjects, while in the others, QRS was shortened (no differences between the subgroups). At RR interval of 1 s, the QRS duration was 97.4 + 4.6, 99.8 + 6.0, 101.6 + 5.3, and 104.8 + 6.3 ms in African females, Caucasian females, African males, and Caucasian males, respectively (all differences P < 0.001). Similar statistical differences were found at an RR of 0.5 s. When accounting for the differences in lean body mass, the difference between African and Caucasian subjects was as large as the difference between females and males. Within each subgroup, the normal QRS durations differed by 15-20 and 18-25 ms at RR intervals of 1 and 0.5 s, respectively. Conclusion: The QRS widths are heart rate dependent and different not only between women and men but also between African and Caucasian individuals. Difference in cardiac resynchronization therapy efficacy might be expected between patients of African and Caucasian origin stratified by QRS duration.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1842-1849
Number of pages8
JournalEuropace
Volume18
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2016

Keywords

  • Normal healthy subjects
  • QRS duration
  • QRS/RR relationship

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