| Literature DB >> 30354308 |
Ahmed Karim Talib1, Masahiko Takagi2, Akira Shimane1,3, Makoto Nakano4, Tatsuya Hayashi5, Katsunori Okajima3, Minami Kentaro6, Koji Fukada7, Shinya Kowase8, Kenji Kurosaki, Junichi Nitta5, Mitsushiro Nishizaki7, Yoshiaki Yui9, Ali Talib10, Nobuyuki Sato10, Yuichiro Kawamura10, Naoyuki Hasebe10, Satoshi Aita, Eikou Sai1, Yuki Komatsu1, Kenji Kuroki1,6,8, Takashi Kaneshiro1, Xu Dongzu1, Kazuko Tajiri1, Miyako Igarashi1, Hiro Yamasaki1, Nobuyuki Murakoshi1, Koji Kumagai1, Yukio Sekiguchi1, Akihiko Nogami1, Kazutaka Aonuma1.
Abstract
Background Both endocardial trigger elimination and epicardial substrate modification are effective in treating ventricular fibrillation (VF) in Brugada syndrome. However, the primary approach and the characteristics of patients who respond to endocardial ablation remain unknown. Methods Among 123 symptomatic Brugada syndrome patients (VF, 63%; syncope, 37%), ablation was performed in 21 VF/electrical storm patients, the majority of whom were resistant to antiarrhythmic drugs. Results Careful endocardial mapping revealed that 81% of the patients had no specific findings, whereas 19% of the patients, who experienced the most frequent VF episodes with notching of the QRS in lead V1, had delayed low-voltage fractionated endocardial electrograms. Ablation of VF triggers followed by endocardial substrate modification was performed in the right ventricular outflow tract in 85% of the cases and in the right ventricle in 15%. VF triggers could not be completely eliminated in 1 patient and VF became noninducible in 14 (88%) patients among 16 patients who underwent VF induction with normalization of Brugada-type ECG in 3. During follow-up (56.14±36.95 months), VF recurrence was observed in 7 patients. Importantly, all patients who had nothing of QRS in lead V1 did not respond to endocardial ablation despite presence of VF-triggering ectopic beats during ablation. Conclusions With careful documentation of VF-triggering ectopic beats and detailed endocardial mapping, endocardial VF trigger elimination followed by endocardial substrate modification has an excellent long-term outcome, whereas presence of QRS notching in lead V1 was associated with high VF recurrence suggesting epicardial substrate ablation as effective initial approach.Entities:
Keywords: Brugada syndrome; catheter ablation; endocardium; sudden death; syncope; ventricular fibrillation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30354308 DOI: 10.1161/CIRCEP.117.005631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol ISSN: 1941-3084