Literature DB >> 31006314

Postinfarction Myocardial Calcifications on Cardiac Computed Tomography: Implications for Mapping and Ablation in Patients With Nontolerated Ventricular Tachycardias.

Daniel M Alyesh1, Konstantinos C Siontis1, Ghaith Sharaf Dabbagh1, Miki Yokokawa1, Mario Njeim1, Smita Patel2, Fred Morady1, Frank Bogun1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Postinfarction ventricular tachycardia (VT) generally involves myocardial fibers surrounded by scar. Calcification of scar tissue has been described, but the relationship between calcifications within endocardial scar and VTs is unclear. The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of myocardial calcifications as detected by cardiac computed tomography (CT) and the benefit for mapping and ablation focusing on nontolerated VTs.
METHODS: Fifty-six consecutive postinfarction patients had a cardiac CT performed before a VT ablation procedure. Another 56 consecutive patients with prior infarction without VT who had cardiac CTs served as a control group.
RESULTS: Myocardial calcifications were identified in 39 of 56 patients (70%) in the postinfarction group with VT, compared with 6 of 56 patients (11%) in the control group without VT. Calcifications were associated with VT when compared with a control group. A calcification volume of 0.538 cm3 distinguished patients with calcification-associated VT from patients without calcification-associated VTs (area under the curve, 0.87; sensitivity, 0.87; specificity, 0.88). Myocardial calcifications corresponded to areas of electrical nonexcitability and formed a border for reentry circuits for 49 VTs (33% of all VTs for which target sites were identified) in 24 of 39 patients (62%) with myocardial calcifications. A nonconfluent calcification pattern was associated with VT target sites independent of calcification volume ( P=0.01).
CONCLUSIONS: Myocardial calcifications detected by cardiac CT in patients with prior infarction are associated with VT. The calcifications correspond to areas of unexcitability and represent a fixed boundary of reentry circuits that can be visualized by CT. Calcifications correspond to effective ablation sites in >1/3 of patients with postinfarction VT.

Entities:  

Keywords:  heart; humans; infarction; myocardial infarction; tachycardia, ventricular

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31006314     DOI: 10.1161/CIRCEP.118.007023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol        ISSN: 1941-3084


  3 in total

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Authors:  C Pandozi; Marco Valerio Mariani; C Chimenti; V Maestrini; D Filomena; M Magnocavallo; M Straito; A Piro; M Russo; M Galeazzi; S Ficili; F Colivicchi; P Severino; M Mancone; F Fedele; C Lavalle
Journal:  J Interv Card Electrophysiol       Date:  2022-01-24       Impact factor: 1.900

2.  Rapidly progressive myocardial calcification following sepsis.

Authors:  Shu Yoshihara; Taku Yaegashi; Masaki Matsunaga; Masaaki Naito
Journal:  J Cardiol Cases       Date:  2021-09-20

3.  Network determinants of cardiovascular calcification and repositioned drug treatments.

Authors:  Euijun Song; Rui-Sheng Wang; Jane A Leopold; Joseph Loscalzo
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2020-07-08       Impact factor: 5.834

  3 in total

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