Abstract

BackgroundSinus rhythm activation time is useful to assess infarct border zone substrate. ObjectiveWe sought to further investigate sinus activation in ventricular tachycardia (VT). MethodsCanine postinfarction data were analyzed retrospectively. In each experiment, an infarct was created in the left ventricular wall by left anterior descending coronary artery ligation. At 3 to 5 days after ligation, 196–312 bipolar electrograms were recorded from the anterior left ventricular epicardium overlapping the infarct border zone. Sustained monomorphic VT was induced by premature electrical stimulation in 50 experiments and was noninducible in 43 experiments. Acquired sinus rhythm and VT electrograms were marked for electrical activation time, and activation maps of representative sinus rhythm and VT cycles were constructed. The sinus rhythm activation signature was defined as the cumulative number of multielectrode recording sites that had activated per time epoch, and its derivative was used to predict VT inducibility and to define the sinus rhythm slow/late activation sequence. ResultsPlotting mean activation signature derivative, a best cutoff value was useful to separate experiments with reentrant VT inducibility (sensitivity, 42/50) vs noninducibility (specificity, 39/43), with an accuracy of 81 of 93. For the 50 experiments with inducible VT, recording sites overlying a segment of isochrone encompassing the sinus rhythm slow/late activation sequence spanned the VT isthmus location in 32 cases (64%), partially spanned it in 15 cases (30%), but did not span it in 3 cases (6%). ConclusionThe sinus rhythm activation signature derivative is assistive to differentiate substrate supporting reentrant VT inducibility vs noninducibility and to identify slow/late activation for targeting isthmus location.

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