ECG VT ABLATION2
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Transcript ECG VT ABLATION2
ECG DIAGNOSIS OF
ISCHEMIC VT
BY
SAID FAWZY
ASSISSTENT LECTURER OF
CARDIOLOGY
BENHA UNIVERSITY
Disclosures
None
Do you think that it is important to
have a 12 lead ECG recording of VT
before starting VT ablation procedure ?
YES
NO
IT DEPENDS
ECG is very specific tool for localizing
VT foci or reentry circuit exit sites ?
AGREE
DO NOT AGREE
IT DEPENDS
Clinical or inducible non clinical VT ?!
Possible VT mechanisms in ischemic
patients
Scar related reentrant VTs (most common).
Focal VTs (including those originating from
the papillary muscles).
Fascicular VTs (inter-fascicular)
BBR VT
What do we expect from the ECG ?
Localize or at least Regionalize the focus or
the exit site.
The possible mechanism of the tachycardia.
Is it endocardial or Epicardial
Limitations of the ECG as a mapping tool
The presence and the extent of infarction.
The degree of intra-myocardial fibrosis.
The shape of the heart and its position in
the chest .
Influence of non-uniform anisotropy in
affecting propagation from tachy site.
Continue…Limitations
Effect of acute ischemia,drugs,and
metabolic abnormalities on conduction.
Integrity of the His-Purkinje system.
Presence of increased myocardial mass
What we are searching for ?
QRS initial forces
QRS amplitude
QRS width
QRS frontal plane axis
BBB pattern
Concordance
The presnece of QR complexes.
QRS initial forces
Rapid initial forces>>> More likely arising from
normal myocardium
Slurred initial forces (pseudodelta wave )>>>
More likely from a scar or from epicardium
QRS amplitude
Usually VTs arising from diseased
myocardium have lower QRS amplitudes
from those arising from normal myocardium
QRS width
>
Free wall VTs
Septal VTs ( assuming
conduction in all directions is equal )
Epicardial VTs
>
Endocardial VTs
QRS frontal plane axis
Superior axis >>> apical site (septal or
lateral ) or inferior wall VTs
Inferior axis>>> basal , outflow tract,high
septal or latral wall of LV.
Concordance
Positive concordance>>> Basal sites
Negative concordance>>> Apical (
mainly apical septum and most commonly
seen with anteroseptal infarctions )
BBB pattern
RBBBR pattern>>> VT certainly from LV
LBBB pattern>>> VT from LV septum or
the right side of the septum
Presence of QS complexes
QS complexes in the inferior leads>>>
Activation start at the inferior wall !
QS complexes in precordial leads>>>
Activation is going away from the anterior
wall.
Just to rememeber
Basic roles in post MI VTs
Almost all VTs arise in the LV or IVS
ECG looses a lot of its ability to precisely
localize VT origin or exit sites
Accuracy of the ECG in anterior MI
(greater myocardial damage)patients is
much less than in inferior MI.
Continue…Basic roles
It is extremely rare for an inferior MI dependent VT to
have an exit site at the higher septum close to the aortic
valve
QS complexes in the lateral leads (V4-V6) reflect origin
near the apex ( septal or lateral )
Almost impossible to distinguish VTs coming from apical
septum and apical free wall based on ECG alone
Inferior infarction VT
Activation goes from back to front>> large R
wave in the precordial leads starting from V2
LBBB VT in inferior MI >> mainly basal septum
(inferobasal septum with left axis and higher
septal with normal axis).
Anterior infarction VT
The situation becomes more complicated with less
accuracy of the ECG (more myocardial damage).
LBBB VT or RBBB VT can occur
LBBB VT and LAD is associated usually with
inferoapical septal region.It can present with negative
concordance and always associated with Q wave in I
and aVL
R wave in V1 and Q in aVL indicates more
posterior position on the septum
RBBB VT usually shows superior axis. V1
can show monophasic R or qR pattern
with QS from V2-V4 or up to V6
Endocadial or Epicardial VT ?
Can the ECG alone answer this Q ?
The answer is simply
NO
What is epicardial VT ?
VTs in which the origin or the critical sites of the
reentrant circuit are located in the subepicardial
tissue as suggested by entrainment maneuvers
and/or termination withen 10 seconds of standard
RF pulses.
Critical epicardial sites may be entained or
interrupted from both the epicardial and
endocardial surfaces making it difficult to
demonstrate the presence of a truly epicardial
circuit in a given case
Limitations
Most of the adopted ECG criteria to predict
Epicardial foci or exit sites have been described
in patients with NICM and idiopathic VTs .
Even VTs with presumed epicardial exit sites
can be still ablated from the endocardial
approach (The entrance or the central isthmus).
No ECG features distinguished outflow tract
epicardial exit sites.
Poor sensitivity and specificty.
Suggested ECG criteria
1-Total QRS duration
QRS more than 198
ms has 86%
specificity and 69%
sensitivity for
epicardial origin of
VT.
2-Pseudo delta wave
Earliest ventricular
actiavation to the
fastest delection an
any precordial lead
Pdw >34 ms has
80% sensitivity and
specificty
3-Intrinscoid deflection time
ID from the earlist
ventricular activation to the
nadir of the first S wave in
any precordial lead .
ID more than 97 ms has
80% specificity and 50%
sensitivity for epicardial VT
origin.
4-RS duration
RS from the earliest ventricular activation
to the peak of R wave in lead V2
RS >121 ms is 82% specific and 57%
sensitive for epicardial VT
5-Maximum Deflection Index
( MDI)
It is defined as the shortest time to maximum
positive or negative deflection in any precordial
lead divided by the QRS duration.
A cut-off value of 0.55 has high sensitivity
(100%) and specificity (98%) for epicardial VT.
This was mainly adopted for epicardial VTs
arising from sinuses of Valsalva.
6-Precordial pattern break (R wave
regression progression)
This was mainly described by Marchilinski group
in Pheladelphia and was in the context of
idiopathic VTs (but may still work).
There is a brupt loss of R wave in V2 followed
by a resumption in R waves from V3 to V6.
Unkown predictive value.
7-Regional Q waves
Again….Remember
Even with the presence of all of the above
mentioned criteria, the ECG is not predictive for
epicardial access and mapping .
Endocardial mapping should be commenced at
first for all cases
The role of the above mentioned criteria in post
MI patients has no strong evidence.
Post MI VTs from papillary
muscles
When to suspect ?
ECG…nothing specific
Gadolinium enhanced MRI
BBR VT
More common in patients with NIDCM.
Its incidence is propably underestimated.
Should be considered in DD specially if there is
ECG evidence of His Purkinje disease
Typical and Atypical BBR VT.
VT involving the left purkinje
system
When to suspect ?
Conclusion
Different VT mechanisms are involved in patients with IHD
ECG, inspite of limitations, is a useful tool in localizing or at least
regionalizing the exit sites of VTs in post MI patients.
ECG has poorer predictive value in patients with anterior infarction
than those with inferior MI
Different ECG criteria can support epicarial focus or exit site but this
does not necessarily indicate the successful ablation site.
Finally,it is mapping and not the ECG that determine where you
have to ablate
THANK YOU