Abstract

BackgroundFunctional substrate mapping during baseline rhythm can identify arrhythmogenic tissue during ventricular tachycardia (VT) ablation. Wall thinning and wall thickness channels (WTCs) derived from computed tomography angiography have been shown to correlate with low voltage and VT isthmuses. The correlation between functional substrate mapping, wall thinning, and WTCs in patients with infarct- or non–infarct-related cardiomyopathies (ICM and NICM, respectively) has not been previously described. ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to correlate cardiac CTA-derived myocardial wall thinning with functional VT substrate mapping using isochronal late activation mapping. MethodsIn 34 patients with ICM or NICM undergoing VT ablation who had a preprocedure computed tomography angiography, myocardial wall thinning was segmented in layers of 1 to 5 mm. Areas of wall thinning and WTCs were then spatially correlated with deceleration zones (DZs) from registered left ventricular endocardial isochronal late activation maps. ResultsIn 21 ICM patients and 13 NICM patients, ICM patients had greater surfaces areas of wall thinning (P < 0.001). In ICM patients, 94.1% of primary DZs were located on areas of wall thinning, compared to 20% of DZs in NICM patients overall but 50% if there was any wall thinning present. Fifty-nine percent of DZs in ICM patients and 56% of DZs in NICM patients were located near WTCs. The positive predictive value for WTC in localizing DZs was 22.5% and 37.8% in ICM and NICM patients, respectively. ConclusionsWall thinning is highly sensitive for functional substrate in ICM patients. WTCs had modest sensitivity for functional substrate but low positive predictive value for identifying DZs in ICM and NICM patients. These findings suggest that wall thinning may facilitate more efficient mapping in ICM patients, but WTCs are insufficient to localize wavefront discontinuities.

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