Abstract

The degree and pattern of conduction disease seem determinant when assessing potential cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) candidates. In the present review, the authors discuss the available noninvasive techniques that can be used to acquire ventricular activation time maps. They describe what body surface mapping has taught us about left bundle branch block, right bundle branch block, intraventricular conduction delay, and right ventricular pacing and discuss the ability of derived parameters of electrical dyssynchrony to predict long-term clinical response to CRT or His bundle pacing.

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