| Literature DB >> 36135433 |
Sara Vázquez-Calvo1, Ivo Roca-Luque1, Andreu Porta-Sánchez1.
Abstract
Catheter ablation of ventricular tachycardia has demonstrated its important role in the treatment of ventricular tachycardia in patients with structural cardiomyopathy. Conventional mapping techniques used to define the critical isthmus, such as activation mapping and entrainment, are limited by the non-inducibility of the clinical tachycardia or its poor hemodynamic tolerance. To overcome these limitations, a voltage mapping strategy based on bipolar electrograms peak to peak analysis was developed, but a low specificity (30%) for VT isthmus has been described with this approach. Functional mapping strategy relies on the analysis of the characteristics of the electrograms but also their propagation patterns and their response to extra-stimulus or alternative pacing wavefronts to define the targets for ablation. With this review, we aim to summarize the different functional mapping strategies described to date to identify ventricular arrhythmic substrate in patients with structural heart disease.Entities:
Keywords: deceleration zones; decremental conduction; functional mapping; hidden substrate; ventricular tachycardia ablation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36135433 PMCID: PMC9501404 DOI: 10.3390/jcdd9090288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ISSN: 2308-3425
Comparation of different VT functional mapping strategies.
| Strategy | Article | Population | Mapping System | Stimulation Setting | Measurement | Objective | RF Target | RF Time (min) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| JACKSON | 6 ischemic. | Intraoperative mapping: custom-made 112 electrode ballon | If LP of fractionated EGM are identify: | DEEP: delayed local potential after stimulation | To compare DEEP vs. LP mapping to identify VT isthmus (retrospectively) | VT critical sites based on activation mapping | N/A | DEEP mapping was more specific than LP mapping for identifying VT isthmus. |
| PORTA-SÁNCHEZ | 20 ischemic. | CARTO: | For all LPs: | DEEP: S2 local potential delayes or splits > 10 ms compared with S1 | To compare DEEP vs. LP mapping to identify VT isthmus | DEEP area | 30.6 | Specificy of DEEP to detect VT isthmus was better than LPs | |
|
| ACOSTA | 37 patients: | CARTO | Identify potential HSC-EGM (>3 deflections and <133 ms) and double extra VERP+60 and VERP+40 to 20 ms | HSC-EGM: potential HSC-EGM that delays after stimulation | To analyses characteristics of patients with HSC-EGM | CCs (scar dechanneling) and HSC-EGM | Interv. group: 17.41 | Patients with HSC-EGM: More frequently ischaemic, smaller low voltage area, low number of LPs |
| DE RIVA | 60 ischemic. | CARTO | RV pacing 500 MS + single extra VERP+50 ms | EDP: low amplitude (<1.5) near field potentials with conduction delay > 10 ms or block. | To compare patients with hidden vs. not hidden substrate | EDPs | Interv. group: 15 | Hidden substrate group: Better FEVI, smaller scar and dense scar, higher 12 m VT free survival | |
|
| REDFEARN | (1) 14 ischemic. and 5 healthy controls | Ensite Precision | RV pacing 600 ms(x6) + VERP 150 | 4 types of response related to latency and EGM duration | (1) To compare different EGM responses after stimulation protocol | (1) Operators were blinded to PEFA | Interv group: 39.47 | (1) Type I and II responses: most frequently at VT termination sites |
|
| SRINIVA-SAN | 30 ischemic. | Ensite Precision | Sinus rhythm (SR)(x5) + VERP 20 ms (SP) | Annotation of LP and LAVAs | To compare LP/LAVA with VT isthmus in two different maps: SR and SP | Total LPs and LAVAs | 32 | LP/LAVAs observed during SP were able to identify regions critical for VT ablation with a greater accuracy than SR mapping |
|
| ANTER | 85 ischemic. | RHYTMIA 92.8% | -SR and RV Pacing 600 ms and LV Pacing 600 ms | Area of activation maps (isochronal maps of 10 ms steps) | To compare areas of activation slowing and critical VT isthmus in three different maps (SR, RV and LV) | Acumulative area of activation slowing | 27.7 | The direction of LV activation is influenced by the magnitude and location of activation slowing: SR Mapping identify 66.2% of the entire area of activation slowing. RV and LV unmask an additional 33% |
|
| AZIZ | 120 patients: | Ensite Precision | Annotation of last deflection and division of the total activation window in 8 equal isochrones | Deceleration zones (DZ): 3 isochrones in less than 1 cm. | To correlate DZ with VT isthmus | Primary DZs | 29 | DZs identify during SR are strongly predictive of critical sites for reentry. |
Figure 1An example of decremental conduction, unidirectional block, and induction of ventricular tachycardia (VT) from Jackson et al. [25]. During right ventricular pacing, local abnormal potentials can be seen on bipoles A to K. With the introduction of the first extrastimulus (S2), an important delay in bipoles A to J is observed. With S3, there is a block (*) of the local potential on bipole I and subsequently with S4 there is block (*) at the VT exit site (bipole J). Block at the VT exit site and conduction delay through the entrance of the channel set the basis for re-entrance. The mechanistic study by Jackson et al. showed that those late potentials that had decremental properties were more frequently co-localized with the VT isthmus.
Figure 2Electrogram classification and response to a double extraestimulus from Acosta et al. [28]. (A) different types of EGMs are shown: from normal through CC-EGMs to potential HSC. (B) the response of the potential HSC-EGM after a double extraestimulus is represented, considering a positive response if the local potential is delayed. Ablation was undertaken in those regions feeding the preserved voltage channels with the “scar dechanneling” technique.
Figure 3Figure adapted from Srinivasan et al. [35] illustrating the Barts’ sensed protocol. (A) shows a high-density VT activation map. (B) illustrates the 2 activation maps during sinus rhythm (left) with a late potential (LP) color timing map and the activation time during the sensed RV pacing beat ((B) right) showing a greater region of LPs during Bart-sense-protocol colocalizing to a greater extent with the mapped isthmus of the induced VT (A). (C) shows delay and splitting of LPs during sense protocol (second beat) is observed within the region of the diastolic pathway of VT.
Figure 4The spatial distribution of activation slowing is influenced by the direction of left ventricular activation. An example of two different maps performed in the same patient during two different ventricular activations: spontaneous sinus rhythm (A) and RV pacing (B). The general zone of activation slowing was similar between maps, similar to the signals shown on the right side of the panels obtained at each HD grid catheter location depicted, consequently, this area should be ablated according to the PHISIO-VT study [38].
Figure 5Correlation between the ventricular tachycardia (VT) circuit with critical diastolic pathway (A) and deceleration zone (DZ) location during sinus rhythm as depicted during ILAM mapping (B). Late isochronal activation map is shown in the left side of the panel (8 isochrones). Two deceleration zones are observed (more than 3 isochrones in less than 1 cm radius) in the anterior wall. The termination site of VT (on the right) colocalized to the DZs.