Japanese heart journal
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Japanese heart journal · Nov 1993
Sudden death may show a circadian time of risk depending on its anatomo-clinical causes and age.
The aim of this study was to determine whether the time of occurrence of sudden death exhibits a circadian rhythm depending on its different anatomoclinical causes. A longitudinal prospective investigation of 610 nonhospitalized subjects who died suddenly in the Emergency Room of Ferrara Hospital between January 1983 and December 1990 was conducted. All subjects underwent autopsy. ⋯ A statistically significant circadian rhythm was found for cases of sudden death due to acute myocardial infarction (peak at 15.28, n = 330, p = 0.013), pulmonary embolism (peak at 11.46, n = 56, p = 0.003) and arrhythmia (peak at 13.08, n = 291, p = 0.04). In Group A no significant circadian rhythm was found, whereas in Group B a significant rhythmicity was found for sudden death from cardiac causes at 13.32 (n = 249, p = 0.015), from myocardial infarction at 15.02 (n = 154, p = 0.018) and from arrhythmia at 13.07 (n = 122, p = 0.014). Different circadian patterns of onset of sudden death may be shown in various subgroups of patients, due not only to different pathophysiologic mechanisms but also to anatomo-clinical aspects.