When Symmetry Saved Lives: The Discovery of Shortened QT Syndrome
Some of medicine's most important discoveries don't begin in a laboratory. They begin with a question — sometimes an offhand one, asked by someone who wasn't even a doctor. In the 1980s, cardiologist Ihor Gussak was working at the Kaunas Center for Arrhythmias, collaborating with engineers developing intelligent pacemakers . His task was straightforward: compile a list of ECG warning signs that could indicate life-threatening conditions. Prolonged QT interval was naturally on that list — a well-established marker of dangerous arrhythmias , known to every cardiologist, with both congenital and drug-induced forms thoroughly documented in medical literature. Then an engineer asked a deceptively simple question: "Does a shortened QT syndrome also exist?" Gussak laughed it off. He told the engineer that answering such questions required a medical degree and at least twenty years of clinical experience. The room moved on. But the question didn't. A Mirror in ...