| Literature DB >> 28781300 |
Keisuke Nakabayashi1, Ryo Sugiura1, Yusuke Mizuno1, Hiroko Kato1, Naomi Nakazawa1, Toshiaki Suzuki1, Hideki Saito1, Naomi Kawakatsu1, Masayuki Goto1, Daichi Isomura1, Hisayuki Okada1, Toshiaki Oka1.
Abstract
A 50-year-old man presented with exertional dyspnea and orthopnea. An electrocardiogram showed a delta wave and a wide QRS complex, similar to left bundle branch block. Cardiac echocardiography revealed diffuse severe hypokinesis and dyssynchrony. The patient was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. We considered that the patient's condition was caused by an accessory pathway-induced cardiomyopathy after heart failure compensation with guideline-oriented medical therapy. We therefore performed catheter ablation for right-sided pre-excitation syndrome as cardiac resynchronization therapy. The left ventricular dyssynchrony was resolved immediately after the procedure, and the patient's ventricular contraction improved, with a reduced cardiac volume at 6 months after the procedure-thus suggesting that the accessory pathway had affected the patient's cardiac function.Entities:
Keywords: accessory pathway-induced cardiomyopathy; radiofrequency catheter ablation; right-sided pre-excitation syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28781300 PMCID: PMC5596278 DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.8205-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Med ISSN: 0918-2918 Impact factor: 1.271
Figure 1.Electrocardiograms before and after catheter ablation. (a, c) An electrocardiogram before catheter ablation showed sinus rhythm, a heart rate of 100 bpm, delta wave, a short PR duration (90 ms), and a wide QRS complex (QRS, 144ms), similar to that observed in left bundle branch block. (b, d) An electrocardiogram after catheter ablation showed sinus rhythm, a heart rate of 86 bpm, a normal PR duration (148 ms), and notch in the precordial leads (QRS, 110ms).
Figure 2.Transthoracic echocardiography before and 6 months after catheter ablation. The patient’s left ventricular dyssynchrony resolved immediately after catheter ablation and his left ventricular function showed dramatic improvement at 6 months after catheter ablation. EF: ejection fraction, CA: catheter ablation, ED: end-diastolic phase, ES: end-systolic phase, LVDd: left ventricular diameter on diastole, LVDs: left ventricular diameter on systole, 6M: 6 months
Figure 3.The electrophysiological study and catheter ablation. The upper panel shows the potential on the right-sided accessory pathway before catheter ablation. The lower panel shows an extra-cardiac and intra-cardiac electrocardiogram after catheter ablation. CA: catheter ablation