Abstract

Ablation of symptomatic ventricular tachycardia (VT) in patients with coronary artery disease is frequently performed using the three dimensional mapping system CARTO. In the amplitude map, bipolar potentials of <1.5 mV are considered abnormal and represent damaged myocardium due to previous infarction. This pathological electrical area can be arrhythmogenic, serving as the substrate for reentrant VT. The purpose of this study was to correlate the size of the endocardial substrate with the success of VT catheter ablation. Included in this retrospective analysis were 69 consecutive patients with coronary artery disease who underwent ablation for symptomatic clinical VT using CARTO. The voltage maps were analyzed and the area with abnormal bipolar electrograms (<1.5 mV) was determined using geometric approximation models. The area of abnormal electrograms was divided into three sizes: small (<or=15 cm(2); 11 patients), medium (16-99 cm(2); 50 patients), and large (>or=100 cm(2); 8 patients). Patient characteristics were not different between the three substrate groups in regard to age, tachycardia cycle length, or number of radiofrequency applications, however differed significantly between the small, medium and large group in regard to left ventricular ejection fraction (44 +/- 12% vs. 32 +/- 9% vs. 21 +/- 7%, respectively; P = 0.001). Overall, there was a significant correlation between myocardial infarction locations and endocardial substrate sizes (P = 0.031), such that 73% of small substrates were found after inferior myocardial infarctions, and 100% of large substrates after anterior and multiple myocardial infarctions (P = 0.003). After ablation, inducibility of ventricular arrhythmias was more rare in patients with small substrates compared to patients with medium or large substrates (small substrates: 9%, medium and large substrates: 43%, P = 0.043). Although during follow-up of 25 +/- 17 months (1 day to 72 months) there was no significant difference between endocardial substrate sizes in regard to recurrence rates (small: 27%, medium: 38%, large: 50%, P = 0.588), patients with a small substrate did not have fast VT or ventricular fibrillation (VF), in contrast to 30% and 38% of patients with medium and large substrates, respectively. We conclude that in patients with coronary artery disease a small area of low amplitude bipolar potentials (<or=15 cm(2)) was seen more often after inferior myocardial infarction than after anterior and multiple infarctions. After ablation, patients with small substrates were rarely inducible and showed a more benign course during follow-up (trend towards fewer arrhythmia recurrences and no fast VT or VF). As a result smaller arrhythmogenic substrates appear to be better amenable to catheter ablation than larger substrates.

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