Erschienen in:
11.03.2022 | Original Contributions
A novel ECG finding in patients with epicardial infarct-associated ventricular tachycardia: a case series
verfasst von:
Dr. Angeliki Darma, MD, Livio Bertagnolli, MD, Borislav Dinov, MD, Federica Torri, MD, Nikolaos Dagres, MD PD, Prof Andreas Bollmann, MD, Prof Gerhard Hindricks, MD, PD Arash Arya, MD
Erschienen in:
Herzschrittmachertherapie + Elektrophysiologie
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Ausgabe 2/2022
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Abstract
Objectives
This study analyzes the incidence, characteristics, and ECG morphology of ventricular tachycardia (VT) in post-infarction patients undergoing epicardial VT ablation.
Background
Ablation of recurrent VTs in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy is typically performed endocardially. In rare cases, epicardial access is required to achieve non-inducibility.
Methods and results
The study evaluated the baseline characteristics, procedural data, and ECG morphology of clinical VT in patients undergoing epicardial VT ablation. From the initial 491 patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) and recurrent VTs undergoing ablation at the Heart Center of Leipzig, Germany, between 2012 and 2020, only 39 patients required an additional epicardial access. In 17 patients, the VTs were associated with infarction scar, while the remaining patients had concomitant CHD without infarction-associated scar and were excluded from the analysis. A propensity match study was performed at a 1:2 ratio for these 17 patients, with 34 patients of the initial cohort as a control group to evaluate the differences in baseline characteristics, procedural data, and ECG morphology of the VTs. The specific VT morphology of negative concordance and superior axis in patients with inferior scar as well as the history of VT ablation were independent predictors of the need for epicardial access.
Conclusions
In addition to previous endocardial ablation, VT ECG morphology with negative concordance and superior axis in post-infarction patients with inferior scar predicted the need for epicardial VT ablation.