Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3006267 Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The story of the long QT syndrome involved a chance interaction that took place in 1957 when Dr. Moss was shown a unique series of ECGs with a prolonged QT interval in a young deaf boy whose recurrent syncope culminated in sudden death. Who could have predicted that this clinical experience would lead to innovative and effective new therapy for a patient with the long QT syndrome several years later and the subsequent formation of the International Long QT Registry? This Registry has stimulated interactions among and between patients and physicians and has enhanced collaborations involving clinical, genetic, and basic-science investigators. The net result has been a significant improvement in the diagnosis, treatment, and outcome of patients with the long QT syndrome and an overall advancement in the science of medicine – two of the many satisfactions that physicians can experience in the clinical practice of medicine.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
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