Irregular
heartbeat linked to genetic mutation
Newswise — Every
day for 10 years, a seemingly heart-healthy
53-year-old woman experienced rapid and irregular
heartbeats. She had no personal or family history of
hypertension or hyperthyroidism.
She did not suffer
from myocardial or coronary artery disease, or any
abnormalities of the heart as best doctors and
medical science could determine. Yet, she complained
of heart palpitations and dizziness nearly to the
point of fainting.
For the patient in
this case study, her symptoms first appeared 10
years ago and they persisted through the years. The
symptoms peaked in the morning and occurred more
frequently as time went on. Doctors prescribed
medication, but it proved to be ineffective.
As a next step,
Mayo Clinic physician researchers explored and
confirmed the presence of a genetic mutation that
clearly established an inherited predisposition to
atrial fibrillation.
Their study
findings appear in the February issue of Nature
Clinical Practice Cardiovascular Medicine (http://www.nature.com/clinicalpractice/cardio).
“Why certain
patients develop atrial fibrillation while others do
not, despite comparable environmental stress
exposure, might ultimately depend on their genetic
makeup,” the authors write.
Atrial
fibrillation is recognized more often in the elderly
who have underlying structural heart disease. But in
this study, Mayo Clinic researchers address the
gene-based form of atrial fibrillation that affects
younger people who do not otherwise harbor risk
factors for the disease. The case was compared to
2,000 individuals who did not carry the mutation or
suffer from atrial fibrillation.
The Mayo Clinic
study is the first to identify an atrial
fibrillation-associated genetic mutation of the
ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channel. Researchers
uncovered its role as a safeguard against atrial
arrhythmia under stress conditions. The fail-safe
mechanism present in most people to provide
electrical stability to the heart under stress was
defective in this patient. The sequencing of KATP
channel genes, using genomic DNA extracted from the
patient’s peripheral white blood cells, revealed a
genetic mutation.
The discovery of
the genetic mutation’s role in contributing to
atrial fibrillation may ultimately improve
physicians’ ability to identify patients who have a
hereditary predisposition to atrial fibrillation,
which is often complicated by increased risk for
stroke and heart failure.
“Our findings
support the emerging understanding of atrial
fibrillation in younger patients as an inherited
disease of ion channels, the building blocks of
electrical pathways,” says Timothy Olson, M.D., a
pediatric cardiologist and lead author of the study.
Because
medications were ineffective in this case, the Mayo
Clinic team treated the woman’s atrial fibrillation
by targeting high-energy radio waves to an area of
the atrium -- an upper heart chamber -- most
vulnerable to stress-induced electrical instability.
This approach highlights the capacity to
successfully treat patients who have genetic forms
of atrial fibrillation.
“This case is a
fine example of individualized medicine in practice,
highlighting the benefit of translating molecular
technology into an understanding of disease
processes in the clinical setting,” says Andre
Terzic, M.D., Ph.D., a cardiologist and senior
author of the study.
Collaboration and
Support
The research team also included Alexey Alekseev,
Ph.D.; Christophe Moreau, Ph.D; Xiaoke Liu, M.D.,
Ph.D.; Leonid Zingman, M.D.; Samuel Asirvatham,
M.D.; and Arshad Jahangir, M.D.; all of Mayo Clinic.
International colleagues included Takashi Miki,
M.D., Ph.D.; and Susumu Seino, M.D., D.Sci.; from
Kobe University, Kobe, Japan.
The research was
supported by the National Institutes of Health,
Marriott Heart Disease Research Program, Marriott
Foundation and Mayo Clinic.
For more on
Mayo Clinic research, go to
http://www.mayo.edu.