Brugada Syndrome Mnemonic [Easy to remember]

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Brugada Syndrome Mnemonic

Let’s talk Brugada Syndrome — the sneaky cardiac condition that can turn a normal-looking young adult into a code blue ⚡.

It’s one of those conditions that gives cardiologists palpitations and USMLE candidates nightmares. And if you’ve ever been on-call at 3 a.m. and tried to differentiate ST-elevation from a Brugada pattern on ECG, you know it feels like reading hieroglyphics during a caffeine crash.

So to keep it simple (and exam-friendly), I use this high-yield mnemonic:

“BRUGADa” — because even life-threatening arrhythmias deserve stylish memory tricks.

Brugada Syndrome Mnemonic = “BRUGADa”

Letter Feature Quick Clinical Note
B Bundle branch block (RBBB pattern) Specifically, incomplete or complete RBBB — check V1–V3! 🩺
R Right precordial ST elevation ST elevation in leads V1–V3 without ischemia — aka “coved-type” ST ↗
U Unexplained syncope Especially during sleep or at rest — ominous warning sign ⚠️
G Genetic disorder (SCN5A mutation) Sodium channel mutation = disrupted depolarization — autosomal dominant inheritance 🧬
A Asian males More common in Southeast Asian men — and often presents in the third decade 🧑🏽‍⚕️
D Drug-provoked ECG pattern Flecainide, procainamide, and other sodium channel blockers can unmask the pattern 💊
a Arrhythmia risk (VT/VF, sudden cardiac death) Sudden cardiac death — especially during sleep or rest. ICD = life-saving 💥

 

🏥 My Experience From the Wards of Quetta

One evening in our Cardiac Care Unit at Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Hospital, a young man came in after a sudden collapse while watching TV. He had no prior history, normal vitals, and clear labs — but his ECG showed that classic “coved” ST elevation in V1–V2 with RBBB-like pattern.

My senior whispered: “Looks like a Brugada.” We confirmed it with a flecainide challenge — and yes, SCN5A mutation was later detected.

It’s humbling how silent yet deadly this condition can be.

📘 Exam & Clinical Pearls

  • ECG pattern + syncope in a young adult = suspect Brugada
  • Remember: It’s not ischemia — the ST elevation is due to sodium channel dysfunction, not coronary artery disease.
  • Always screen family members once diagnosed — it’s a heritable arrhythmogenic condition.
  • ICD placement is the definitive treatment in high-risk individuals.

Happy learning, folks!

📚 Authored by:

Dr. Aurangzaib Qambrani
MBBS, PLAB, MRCP-UK
General Medicine, Gastroenterology & Cardiac Care Unit
Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Hospital, Quetta

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