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Heart 1999;81:570-575; doi:10.1136/hrt.81.6.570
Copyright © 1999 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & British Cardiovascular Society
Heart 1999;81:570-575 ( June )

Mapping and ablation of ventricular tachycardia with the aid of a non-contact mapping system

R J Schilling, N S Peters, D W Davies

St Mary's Hospital and Imperial College School of Medicine, London, UK

Correspondence to: Dr R J Schilling, Waller Department of Cardiology, St Mary's Hospital, Praed Street, London W2 1NY, UK email: r.schilling{at}ic.ac.uk

Accepted for publication 18 December 1998

OBJECTIVE---Treatment of ventricular tachycardia (VT) in coronary heart disease has to date been limited to palliative treatment with drugs or implantable defibrillators. The results of curative treatment with catheter ablation have proved disappointing because the complexity of the VT mechanism makes identification of the substrate using conventional mapping techniques difficult. The use of a mapping technology that may address some of these issues, and thus make possible a cure for VT with catheter ablation, is reported.
PATIENTS AND INTERVENTION---The non-contact system, consisting of a multielectrode array catheter (MEA) and a computer mapping system, was used to map VT in 24 patients. Twenty two patients had structural heart disease, the remainder having "normal" left ventricles with either fasicular tachycardia or left ventricular ectopic tachycardia.
RESULTS---Exit sites were demonstrated in 80 of 81 VT morphologies by the non-contact system, and complete VT circuits were traced in 17. In another 37 morphologies of VT 36 (30)% (mean (SD)) of the diastolic interval was identified. Thirty eight VT morphologies were ablated using 154 radiofrequency energy applications. Successful ablation was achieved by 77% of radiofrequency within diastolic activation identified by the non-contact system and was significantly more likely to ablate VT than radiofrequency at the VT exit, or remote from diastolic activation. Over a mean follow up of 1.5 years, 14 patients have had no recurrence of VT and only two target VTs have recurred. Five patients have had recurrence of either slower non-sustained, undocumented or fast non-target VT. Five patients have died, one from tamponade from a pre-existing temporary pacing wire, and four from causes unrelated to the procedure.
CONCLUSION---The non-contact system can safely be used to map and ablate haemodynamically stable VT with low VT recurrence rates. It is yet to be established whether this system may be applied with equal success to patients with haemodynamically unstable VT.


Keywords: ventricular tachycardia; mapping; ablation


© 1999 by Heart

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