| Literature DB >> 11078271 |
M Saeed1, M S Link, S Mahapatra, M Mouded, D Tzeng, V Jung, R Contreras, C Swygman, M Homoud, N A Estes, P J Wang.
Abstract
Ventricular tachycardia (VT) initiation and its relation to various clinical factors was studied by reviewing intracardiac electrograms from patients with implantable cardioverter-defibrillators. Events were divided into (1) sudden onset without preceding ventricular premature complexes (VPCs), (2) extrasystolic onset with VPCs, or (3) paced, depending on the type and morphology of the last 5 beats before initiation of VT. Prematurity index, sinus rate, cycle length, and presence of short-long-short sequence for each episode was noted. A total of 268 episodes of VT among 52 patients were analyzed. Extrasystolic initiation was the most frequent pattern (177; 66%) followed by sudden onset (75; 28%) and paced (16; 6%). Among extrasystolic onset, 99 episodes (56%) were due to multiple VPCs and 149 episodes (84%) had different VPC morphology than the subsequent VT. Among pacing-induced VT, 13 of 16 episodes were due to inappropriate pacing due to undersensing of prior R waves. Sudden-onset episodes were slower (mean cycle length 383+/-97 ms) than extrasystolic (mean cycle length 336+/-88 ms, p = 0.002) and paced (mean cycle length 313+/-85 ms, p = 0.01) onset. Patients in the sudden-onset group had better left ventricular ejection fraction (33+/-15%) than the extrasystolic (29+/-11%, p<0.001) and paced (28+/-14%, p<0.01) groups. Extrasystolic onset with multiple, late coupled VPCs was the most common pattern of VT initiation and was associated with lower ejection fraction. Sudden-onset initiation was more common with better preserved systolic function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2000 PMID: 11078271 DOI: 10.1016/s0002-9149(99)00815-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cardiol ISSN: 0002-9149 Impact factor: 2.778