Thirty-five years ago, when I was a cardiovascular resident, I vividly remember being
shocked by the gender/age difference in the prevalence of patients with congenital
long QT syndrome (LQTS), which is a typical inherited arrhythmia syndrome. Most patients
with congenital LQTS referred to the adult cardiology department, especially those
who were symptomatic with syncope or cardiac arrest, were female. Since I was working
in the adult cardiology department, I believed congenital LQTS was a female illness.
One day during the summer vacation period, I was called to the pediatric cardiology
department to consult for a child with congenital LQTS. The child was an 8-year-old
boy, and several boys with congenital LQTS were being admitted to the pediatric cardiology
department. At that time, I knew for the first time that there was a gender/age difference
in the prevalence of patients with congenital LQTS. Ten years later, Locati et al
1
Locati E.H.
Zareba W.
Moss A.J.
et al.
Age- and sex-related differences in clinical manifestations in patients with congenital
long-QT syndrome: findings from the International LQTS Registry.
reported in patients with congenital LQTS that the risk of cardiac events was higher
in males up until puberty (Kr)
2
Kurokawa J.
Tamagawa M.
Harada N.
et al.
Acute effects of oestrogen on the guinea pig and human IKr channels and drug-induced
prolongation of cardiac repolarization.
and slow activating component (IKs)
3
Tanabe S.
Hata T.
Hiraoka M.
Effects of estrogen on action potential and membrane currents in guinea pig ventricular
myocytes.
of the delayed rectifier potassium current, thus prolonging the ventricular action
potential duration, reflecting a prolongation of the QT interval on the surface electrocardiogram
(ECG). In contrast, several experimental studies have reported the involvement of
the male hormone, testosterone, in an increase in outward potassium currents, such
as IKr,
4
Shuba Y.M.
Degtiar V.E.
Osipenko V.N.
Naidenov V.G.
Woosley R.L.
Testosterone-mediated modulation of HERG blockade by proarrhythmic agents.
,
5
Liu X.K.
Katchman A.
Whitfield B.H.
et al.
In vivo androgen treatment shortens the QT interval and increases the densities of
inward and delayed rectifier potassium currents in orchiectomized male rabbits.
IKs,
6
Bai C.X.
Kurokawa J.
Tamagawa M.
Nakaya H.
Furukawa T.
Nontranscriptional regulation of cardiac repolarization currents by testosterone.
and inward rectifier potassium current (IK1),
5
Liu X.K.
Katchman A.
Whitfield B.H.
et al.
In vivo androgen treatment shortens the QT interval and increases the densities of
inward and delayed rectifier potassium currents in orchiectomized male rabbits.
and a decrease in inward L-type calcium current (ICa-L).
6
Bai C.X.
Kurokawa J.
Tamagawa M.
Nakaya H.
Furukawa T.
Nontranscriptional regulation of cardiac repolarization currents by testosterone.
Therefore, after puberty, the QT interval is prolonged in females because of a decrease
in IKr and IKs by estrogen, while it is abbreviated in males because of an increase in IKr, IKs, and IK1 and a decrease in ICa-L by testosterone, resulting in a reversed cardiac event rate before and after puberty
between males and females.
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