Abstract
AimsIn the management of both ventricular and supraventricular tachycardia in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) catheter ablation has now been recognized as one of the mainstays.Methods and resultsWe review our initial experience of using the Rhythmia mapping system in a cohort of 12 adult CHD patients presenting with multiple arrhythmia substrates. A total of 78 arrhythmia maps were attempted in a total of 15 procedures, but possible due to the dilatation of the target chamber only 44% of maps were able to reconstruct the entire arrhythmia. All patients underwent pre-procedure 3D imaging (either cardiac magnetic resonance or computed tomography), but image integration was suboptimal. A median of two maps per patient were finally analysed and acquisition took in median 22 min with a median number of 12 574 (8230–18 167) mapping points. Procedural data with a total duration amounting to in median 285 (194–403) min, with a median total fluoroscopy exposure of 7.5 (5.2–10.7) min. After a median of 1.5 procedures [median of 12 (8–16 months)], nine patients remained in stable sinus rhythm or atrial paced rhythm, while three patients had further sustained recurrences. One of these passed away in end-staged heart failure.ConclusionThis initial experience of using high-density mapping for arrhythmia management in patients with CHD allowed rapid acquisition of multiple maps with high accuracy to identify surgical scars and fibrosis, however, it was limited by large atrial volumes and a high percentage of incomplete maps resulting in modest clinical success.
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More From: Europace : European pacing, arrhythmias, and cardiac electrophysiology : journal of the working groups on cardiac pacing, arrhythmias, and cardiac cellular electrophysiology of the European Society of Cardiology
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