Table 5.
Diagnostic criteria for arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD)
Diagnostic criteria | |
---|---|
I. Global and/or regional dysfunction and structural alterations | • Major |
—Severe dilatation and reduction of right ventricular ejection fraction with no (or only mild) left and ventricular impairment | |
—Localized right ventricular aneurysms (akinetic or dyskinetic areas with diastolic bulging) | |
—Severe segmental dilatation of the right ventricle | |
• Minor | |
—Mild global right ventricular dilatation and/or ejection fraction reduction with normal left ventricle | |
—Mild segmental dilatation of the right ventricle | |
—Regional right ventricular hypokinesia | |
II. Tissue characterisation of walls | • Major |
—Fibrofatty replacement of myocardium at endomyocardial biopsy | |
III. Repolarisation abnormalities | • Minor |
—Inverted T waves in right precordial leads (V2 and V3) (people >12 years old; in absence of right bundle branch block) | |
IV. Depolarisation of conduction abnormalities | • Major |
—Epsilon waves or localised prolongation (>110 ms) of the QRS complex in right precordial leads (V1—V3) | |
• Minor | |
—Late potentials (signal-averaged ECG) | |
V. Arrhythmias | • Minor |
—Left bundle branch block type ventricular tachycardia (sustained or nonsustained; ECO, Holter, exercise testing) | |
—Frequent ventricular extrasystoles on Holter (>1,000/24 h) | |
VI. Family history | • Major |
—Familial disease confirmed at necropsy or surgery | |
• Minor | |
—Familial history of premature sudden death (at <35 years) due to suspected right ventricular cardiomyopathy | |
—Familial history (clinical diagnosis based on present criteria) |
—Diagnosis is made if two major, or one major and two minor, or four minor criteria are satisfied. List is adapted from [42]