| Literature DB >> 22665960 |
Radu Vatasescu1, Reinder Evertz, Lluis Mont, Marta Sitges, Josep Brugada, Antonio Berruezo.
Abstract
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is an autosomal dominant inherited genetic disease characterized by compensatory pathological left ventricle (LV) hypertrophy due to sarcomere dysfunction. In an important proportion of patients with HCM, the site and extent of cardiac hypertrophy results in severe obstruction to LV outflow tract (LVOT), contributing to disabling symptoms and increasing the risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD). In patients with progressive and/or refractory symptoms despite optimal pharmacological treatment, invasive therapies that diminish or abolish LVOT obstruction relieve heart failure-related symptoms, improve quality of life and could be associated with long-term survival similar to that observed in the general population. The gold standard in this respect is surgical septal myectomy, which might be supplementary associated with a reduction in SCD. Percutaneous techniques, particularly alcohol septal ablation (ASA) and more recently radiofrequency (RF) septal ablation, can achieve LVOT gradient reduction and symptomatic benefit in a large proportion of HOCM patients at the cost of a supposedly limited septal myocardial necrosis and a 10-20% risk of chronic atrioventricular block. After an initial period of enthusiasm, standard DDD pacing failed to show in randomized trials significant LVOT gradient reductions and objective improvement in exercise capacity. However, case reports and recent small pilot studies suggested that atrial synchronous LV or biventricular (biV) pacing significantly reduce LVOT obstruction and improve symptoms (acutely as well as long-term) in a large proportion of severely symptomatic HOCM patients not suitable to other gradient reduction therapies. Moreover, biV/LV pacing in HOCM seems to be associated with significant LV reverse remodelling.Entities:
Keywords: biventricular pacing; hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy; intraventricular gradient; reverse remodelling
Year: 2012 PMID: 22665960 PMCID: PMC3356591 DOI: 10.1016/s0972-6292(16)30503-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian Pacing Electrophysiol J ISSN: 0972-6292
Figure 1A: RAO projection showing the occlusive venography in a hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy patient; note the extreme tortuousity as well as the reduced diameter of the target coronary sinus ventricular branch. B: The same RAO projection showing the final lead position of the leads (a 4F bipolar lead was used).
Figure 2Upper panels show Mmode scans across the left ventricle and the mitral valve before (preBiv) and after atrial synchronous biventricular pacing (postBiv): arrows indicate systolic anterior motion (SAM) of the mitral valve, which touches the septum preBiv and does not contact it postBiv. These changes in the degree of SAM are concomitantly seen with a significant decrease of LVOT gradient (from 76 to 48 mmHg). In this patient, atrial synchronous right ventricular apical pacing did not change the left ventricular outflow tract gradient.