JAPANESE CIRCULATION JOURNAL
Online ISSN : 1347-4839
Print ISSN : 0047-1828
ISSN-L : 0047-1828
Clinical Study
Electrophysiologic Parameters to Predict Clinical Recurrence of Ventricular Tachycardia in Patients Under Electrophysiologic Study-Guided Effective Pharmacological Therapy
Shinichi NiwanoMasayuki YamauraNaoto YoshizawaMasahiko MoriguchiYoshikazu KitanoYoshifusa AizawaTohru Izumi
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1999 Volume 63 Issue 9 Pages 674-680

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Abstract

Although an electrophysiologic study (EPS) is the most reliable method for selecting the treatment for a patient with sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT), VT recurrence may occur even during EPS-guided effective therapy. Electrophysiologic parameters were compared between patients with and without arrhythmic events under EPS-guided effective therapy to identify the predictive parameters of VT recurrence during the clinical course. The study population consisted of 77 consecutive patients with sustained VT who were receiving long-term pharmacological therapy that was demonstrated to be effective by the EPS assessment. The VT induction protocol employed 1-3 extrastimuli and rapid ventricular pacing at 2 right ventricular sites and 1 left ventricular site, and isoproterenol was infused when VT was not induced. To determine the `effective' antiarrhythmic drug, all sustained ventricular arrhythmias had to be prevented during the whole induction protocol, but repetitive ventricular responses (RVR) were allowed to remain for up to 5 beats when they were in the same QRS configurations as the clinical VT and up to 12 beats when they were in polymorphic QRS configurations. The effective refractory periods (ERPs) at the 3 ventricular pacing sites and their difference (ie, ERP-dispersion) and the maximum number of RVR beats were evaluated in an EPS during the control state and at the time of drug assessment. In the comparison of patients with and without VT recurrence, there was no significant difference in clinical characteristics or ERPs, but the ΔERP-dispersion (ie, the increase in ERP-dispersion caused by the antiarrhythmic drug) and the maximum number of RVRs were significantly smaller in the group of patients without VT recurrence (ΔERP-dis, -3±8 vs 6±12, p=0.0027; maxRVR, 3±3 vs 5±4, p=0.0160). The VT recurrence rate was significantly lower in the patients with ΔERP-dis ≤0 or maxRVR <6 in comparison with the others (p=0.0114 and p=0.0360). Patients with VT recurrence showed greater ΔERP-disp and a longer duration of RVRs at the time of drug assessment in comparison with the patients without VT recurrence. The prognosis of patients under EPS-guided therapy may be improved by the use of stricter criteria for drug assessment in the EPS, although this may decrease the number of drug responders determined in the EPS. (Jpn Circ J 1999; 63: 674 - 680)

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© 1999 THE JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOCIETY
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