Abstract

Introduction : radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is an established treatment of post-myocardial infarction ventricular tachycardia (VT). Endocardial VT ablation can be insuffi cient for VT termination when the scar is intramural/epicardial. Purpose : to assess the extent of epicardial electrophysiological VT substrate in patients with remote myocardial infarction. Materials and methods : thirteen patients with sustained postinfarction VT, who signed an informed consent, were included into the study. All patients underwent full clinical evaluation. Electroanatomical voltage bi- and unipolar mapping (EAVM) of endocardial and epicardial surfaces was performed. Maps were evaluated for the presence of low-voltage areas and local abnormal ventricular activity (LAVA). RFA was performed at LAVA sites. The end-point of the procedure was scar LAVA abolition and VT noninducibility (procedure success). VT recurrence was detected using an implantable cardioverter-defi brillator and/or ECG monitoring. Results : epicardial access was successful in 12 patients. Epicardial access was performed at a fi rst procedure in 7 patients, 4 patients had a history of previous endocardial ablation. Epicardial LAVA sites were detected in 9 patients. Endocardial and epicardial arrhythmogenic substrate localization coincided in 8 patients. One patient had only epicardial scar, 1 patient had only septal endocardial scar. In one patient LAVA sites had different localizations on epicardial and endocardial maps. Acute ablation success was noted in 12 patients. Conclusion : in our patient group transmural scar and epicardial electrophysiological arrhythmogenic substrate was detected in 82% of cases. Isolated endocardial ablation may be unsuccessful, in such cases epicardial mapping and ablation might be useful.

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