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Circulation. 1995;91:2002-2009

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(Circulation. 1995;91:2002-2009.)
© 1995 American Heart Association, Inc.


Articles

Body Surface Potential Distributions During Idiopathic Ventricular Tachycardia

Didier Klug, MD; Ange Ferracci, MD; Franck Molin, MD; Marc Dubuc, MD; Pierre Savard, PhD; Teresa Kus, MD, PhD; François Hélie, MSc; René Cardinal, PhD; Réginald Nadeau, MD

From the Research Center, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal and the Departments of Medicine and Pharmacology, Institut de Génie Biomédical and Ecole Polytechnique, Université de Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Correspondence to Dr Réginald Nadeau, Research Center, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, 5400 Gouin Blvd W, Montreal, Québec, Canada H4J1C5.

Background The purpose of this report is to describe the body surface potential maps (BSPMs) during idiopathic ventricular tachycardia (VT) and to determine what differences exist between different idiopathic VT morphologies.

Methods and Results We performed BSPMs during VT on 12 consecutive patients (3 women and 9 men; mean age, 42±13 years) presenting symptomatic idiopathic VT referred to our institution for electrophysiological study. Basal ECG, chest radiograph, and echocardiogram were normal in all patients. Clinical tachycardia showed left bundle branch block pattern (LBBB) in 9 patients, with sustained VT in 5 and nonsustained VT in 4, and right bundle branch block pattern (RBBB) in 3 with sustained VT. We found a unique pattern of BSPMs in each of the 9 patients during idiopathic LBBB VT configuration, whether sustained or nonsustained VT. This pattern appeared at the onset of the QRS and remained stable during the whole QRS complex. The area of minimal potential located in the upper anterior part of the torso was compatible with an origin of VT in the right ventricular outflow tract, as confirmed in 5 patients by successful radiofrequency ablation. We found an evolving pattern with two phases in each of the three RBBB VTs. The electrical axis during the initial part of the QRS could correspond to an endocardial-epicardial vector. The second phase, with a high voltage and area of minimal potential located in the inferior and anterior part of the torso, was compatible with a left ventricular apical origin that was confirmed by epicardial and endocardial mapping during cryosurgery in 1 patient. For all the VTs, the QRS isoarea maps showed the same pattern as the second phase of the QRS.

Conclusions Two different BSPM patterns were found. All LBBB VTs had the same stable pattern corresponding to an infundibular origin. All RBBB VTs had an evolving pattern that stabilized in the second part of the QRS complex corresponding to an apical origin.


Key Words: tachycardia • potentials • mapping




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