Programmed electrical stimulation during ventricular tachycardia identified sites of slow conduction in 4 of 7 patients, providing information about proximity to the tachycardia circuit.
Observational (n=7)
Does programmed electrical stimulation during ventricular tachycardia help localize areas of slow conduction in patients with sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia?
7 patients with sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia undergoing programmed electrical stimulation to localize areas of slow conduction.
Programmed electrical stimulation with single stimuli delivered during ventricular tachycardia at multiple endocardial sites
Localization of areas of slow conduction participating in the tachycardia circuit (indicated by advancement of tachycardia with marked conduction delay and without alteration of ventricular activation sequence)surrogate
Programmed electrical stimulation during ventricular tachycardia at sites with abnormal electrograms can help localize the slow conduction area of the tachycardia circuit, potentially guiding ablation.
Analysis of local endocardial electrograms recorded during reentrant ventricular tachycardia does not provide direct information as to the participation of the recording site in the tachycardia circuit. To determine if programmed electrical stimulation at the recording site can assist in localizing areas of slow conduction that are participating in the tachycardia circuit, seven patients with sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia were studied. The cardiac cycle was scanned with single stimuli delivered during ventricular tachycardia at multiple endocardial sites. In four patients, an endocardial site was identified at which stimuli advanced the tachycardia with marked conduction delay and without alteration of the ventricular activation sequence, as indicated by a lack of change in the configuration of the QRS complex and endocardial electrograms distant from the stimulation site. This finding was seen only during stimulation at sites displaying abnormal electrograms and is consistent with premature depolarization of an area of slow conduction within the tachycardia focus by stimuli delivered at or near that area. Attempted endocardial catheter ablation at or adjacent to these sites in three patients was followed by persistent noninducibility of ventricular tachycardia in one patient, marked modification of the configuration and cycle length of inducible tachycardia in one patient and transient noninducibility of tachycardia in one patient. Programmed electrical stimulation during ventricular tachycardia at sites with abnormal electrograms may provide information about the proximity of the stimulation site to the tachycardia circuit.
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William G. Stevenson
Electrophysiology
James N. Weiss
Electrophysiology
Isaac Wiener
ATP Clinical Research (United States)
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
University of California, Los Angeles
Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences
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Stevenson et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (n=7). Programmed electrical stimulation was evaluated on Identification of an endocardial site where stimuli advanced the tachycardia with marked conduction delay. Programmed electrical stimulation during ventricular tachycardia identified sites of slow conduction in 4 of 7 patients, providing information about proximity to the tachycardia circuit.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a26890fe7774a7614ebe7b5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/0735-1097(88)91526-4
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