Literature DB >> 7139898

The incidence and clinical significance of epicardial late potentials in patients with recurrent sustained ventricular tachycardia and coronary artery disease.

M E Josephson, M B Simson, A H Harken, L N Horowitz, R A Falcone.   

Abstract

Seventy-eight patients with ventricular tachycardia associated with coronary artery disease underwent intraoperative mapping while in sinus rhythm to evaluate the frequency and significant of late potentials. In 30 of these patients, the surface ECG was subjected to signal averaging to correlate the incidence and duration of low-amplitude, delayed electrograms with the presence of late potentials recorded during epicardial mapping. One to four epicardial late potentials were observed in nine patients (11.5%). These nine patients did not differ hemodynamically from patients without late potentials. In four patients, the site of epicardial breakthrough during ventricular tachycardia bore no relationship (i.e., greater than 3 cm away) to the late potential or the site of origin of the tachycardia. In the five other patients with late potentials, epicardial breakthrough and site of origin of ventricular tachycardia were closely related to the free wall of an apical aneurysm. However, three of these patients had additional tachycardias from disparate sites. Twenty-seven of 30 patients in whom signal averaging was used had a low-amplitude signal in the terminal 40 msec of the amplified QRS complex. In 24 of these 27 patients (89%), the low-amplitude tail was demonstrated in the absence of epicardial late potentials. We conclude that epicardial late potentials are found infrequently in patients with ventricular tachycardia associated with coronary artery disease; epicardial late potentials cannot be used to localize ventricular tachycardia; and the specific low-amplitude tail on the signal-averaged electrogram is unrelated to epicardial events.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1982        PMID: 7139898     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.66.6.1199

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  6 in total

1.  Sympathetic modulation of electrical activation in normal and infarcted myocardium: implications for arrhythmogenesis.

Authors:  Olujimi A Ajijola; Robert L Lux; Anadjeet Khahera; OhJin Kwon; Eric Aliotta; Daniel B Ennis; Michael C Fishbein; Jeffrey L Ardell; Kalyanam Shivkumar
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2017-01-13       Impact factor: 4.733

2.  A swine model of infarct-related reentrant ventricular tachycardia: Electroanatomic, magnetic resonance, and histopathological characterization.

Authors:  Cory M Tschabrunn; Sébastien Roujol; Reza Nezafat; Beverly Faulkner-Jones; Alfred E Buxton; Mark E Josephson; Elad Anter
Journal:  Heart Rhythm       Date:  2015-07-28       Impact factor: 6.343

3.  Electrophysiologic Substrate and Risk of Mortality in Incident Hemodialysis.

Authors:  Larisa G Tereshchenko; Esther D Kim; Andrew Oehler; Lucy A Meoni; Elyar Ghafoori; Tejal Rami; Maggie Maly; Muammar Kabir; Lauren Hawkins; Gordon F Tomaselli; Joao A Lima; Bernard G Jaar; Stephen M Sozio; Michelle Estrella; W H Linda Kao; Rulan S Parekh
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2016-04-29       Impact factor: 10.121

Review 4.  Frequency content and characteristics of ventricular conduction.

Authors:  Larisa G Tereshchenko; Mark E Josephson
Journal:  J Electrocardiol       Date:  2015-08-28       Impact factor: 1.438

Review 5.  Epicardial Ablation of Ventricular Tachycardia.

Authors:  Roderick Tung; Kalyanam Shivkumar
Journal:  Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J       Date:  2015 Apr-Jun

6.  Polyscore of Non-invasive Cardiac Risk Factors.

Authors:  Alexander Steger; Alexander Müller; Petra Barthel; Michael Dommasch; Katharina Maria Huster; Katerina Hnatkova; Daniel Sinnecker; Alexander Hapfelmeier; Marek Malik; Georg Schmidt
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2019-02-04       Impact factor: 4.566

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.