Surgery for postinfarction ventricular tachycardia in the pre-implantable cardioverter defibrillator era: early and long term outcomes in 100 consecutive patients
J P Bourkea, R W F Campbella, J M McComba, S S Furnissa, J C Doiga, C J Hiltonb
a University
Department of Cardiology, Freeman Hospital and University of Newcastle
upon Tyne NE7 7DN, UK, b Department of Surgery, Cardiothoracic Unit,
Freeman Hospital
Correspondence to: Dr Bourke. email: j.p.bourke{at}ncl.ac.uk
Accepted for publication 25 February 1999
OBJECTIVE
To report
outcome following surgery for postinfarction ventricular tachycardia
undertaken in patients before the use of implantable defibrillators.
DESIGN
A retrospective
review, with uniform patient selection criteria and surgical and
mapping strategy throughout. Complete follow up. Long term death
notification by OPCS (Office of Population Censuses and Statistics) registration.
SETTING
Tertiary
referral centre for arrhythmia management.
PATIENTS
100
consecutive postinfarction patients who underwent map guided
endocardial resection at this hospital in the period 1981-91 for
drug refractory ventricular tachyarrhythmias.
RESULTS
Emergency
surgery was required for intractable arrhythmias in 28 patients, and 32 had surgery within eight weeks of infarction ("early"). Surgery
comprised endocardial resections in all, aneurysmectomy in 57, cryoablations in 26, and antiarrhythmic ventriculotomies in 11. Twenty
five patients died < 30 days after surgery, 21 of cardiac failure.
This high mortality reflects the type of patients included in the
series. Only 12 received antiarrhythmic drugs after surgery.
Perioperative mortality was related to preoperative left ventricular
function and the context of surgery. Mortality rates for elective
surgery more than eight weeks after infarction, early surgery,
emergency surgery, and early emergency surgery were 18%, 31%, 46%,
and 50%, respectively. Actuarial survival rates at one, three, five,
and 10 years after surgery were 66%, 62%, 57%, and 35%.
CONCLUSIONS
Surgery
offers arrhythmia abolition at a risk proportional to the patient's
preoperative risk of death from ventricular arrhythmias. The long term
follow up results suggest a continuing role for surgery in selected
patients even in the era of catheter ablation and implantable defibrillators.
Keywords: arrhythmias; myocardial infarction; surgical management
© 1999 by Heart
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