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1. Dr. Hany Abed Bundles of Joy
3. The Case PMH
Premature birth 27/40
Chronic lung disease requiring ventilation
VLBW and anaemia
Normal CV examination at the time
SH
Non-smoker, drinker. No illicit drug use. Year 8
FH
6 siblings. No sudden deaths, drowning, single driver MVA. No CV history of note. Lebanese background
4. The Case No medications
Examination
Anxious
HR 205/min. 125/70. SaO2 100% RA
Nil dysmorphic features. Descended testes
Femoral pulses present
Normal CV exam
Other systems - NAD
5. The Case ECG (arrhythmia)
6. The Case ECG (Sinus Rhythm)
7. The Case
Ix: Isolated hyperbilirubinaemia
Rx
IV Adenosine No effect
IV Verapamil Reversion
Remained in Sinus Rhythm during observation
Discharged for O.P. Echo and follow-up
8. Follow-up Normal echo. PASP 27mmHg
Rx: Sotalol and limitation on sporting activities
Re-admission 2005
Non-compliant
IV sotalol failed
150J DC cardioversion
Booked for diagnostic EPS (Dx: RVOT VT) under GA
9. Results Normal antegrade and retrograde conduction
No evidence of accessory pathway or dual AV node physiology
No VT inducible in presence of isoprenaline
Re-presented 2006
Conscious WCT during tennis
Was off sotalol. No response to adenosine
Failed 50Jx1, 100Jx1, 150Jx1, 200Jx3 DCCV
Reverted with IV amiodarone
10. Progress Re-admission 2007
Associated TnI rise
Rx: Adenosine, Amiodarone, Metoprolol, Sotalol
Dx: BBR VT
Re-booked EPS under LA
Discharged on Sotalol
MRI? SAECG?
11. High Resolution Electrocardiography X,Y,Z Leads
Analogue ? Digital Signal conversion
QRS template
Averaging successive QRS complexes
Low frequency filtering
Quantifying ventricular high frequency late potentials
12. HR-ECG Late potentials
Scar-related slow depolarizing currents within viable myocardial channels
Inferoposterior ventricular regions
Broad QRS
Results of HR-ECG
QRSd
Root Mean Square Voltage at terminal
Low Amplitude signal
13. Signal Averaged ECG - SAECG Detects areas of microvolt slow conduction in re-entry circuit too low to observe on surface ECG
Occur as late potentials after QRS
Used as a stratifying tool in ICM/NICM/ARVD/Brugada/Idiopathic VT, for risk of SCD
14. SAECG Low amplitude, high frequency signals
Reflect slow and fragmented myocardial conduction
Critical components for re-entry: heterogeneous tissue conduction velocity and refractoriness
Predictive value for SCD and ventricular arrhythmias
Post- MI
Comparison to LVEF%
15. Re-Admission ECG Close analysis of ECG
Rapid intriscoid deflections
Likely circuit utilising rapidly conducting specialised cardiac tissue
16. The His-Purkinje System Rapidly conducting network: 1-4 m/sec.
Penetrate inner 1/3 of endocardial surface
Long refractory period
Free running Purkinje fibres organised in series (false tendons) are capable of contraction
Connexins play a role in apparent current-to-load mismatch
17. Cellular characteristics of human Purkinje tissue. 1982. Kenneth Dangman, et al. Micro-electrode testing of ex-vivo (transplant recipients) purkinje tissue
Highest maximum phase 0 upstroke velocity (Vmax) of all cardiac tissue significantly greater than ventricular tissue
18. Gap Junctions and Connexions: Cx43 Cx43 gap junction protein channel subunit
Continuous IHC staining over entire purkinje cell-purkinje cell borders within fiber strand
19. Cable Theory and Current-Load Mismatch
Conduction Velocity 8 vRadius
Circumferential gap junction channel distribution in purkinje fibres
Functional increase in conducting fibre radius
Rapid conduction velocity independent of any change in active membrane properties
20. Role of subjacent collagen Collagen separates Purkinje bundles from subjacent ventricular tissue
Prevents premature current dissipation
21. HPS Site of Re-entrant Arrhythmias Fascicular VT
Left anterior fascicle
Left posterior fascicle
Bundle Branch Re-entry
Macro re-entrant circuit between the left and right bundles
Inter-fascicular VT
22. Fascicular Ventricular Tachycardia
23. Fascicular Ventricular Tachycardia Idiopathic Ca-sensitive
Macro re-entrant localised circuit
Molecular abnormality: Verapamil sensitive zone with slow conduction
24. Fascicular VT Age: 15-40 years, ?>?
No macro structural heart disease
Paroxysmal catecholamine-dependent
May be incessant ? Tachycardiomyopathy
25. Left Posterior Hemi-Bundle Subtype
26. Fascicular VT Anatomy and Physiology Relatively narrow WCT
90% originate from left posterior fascicle
Anatomic substrate: LV false tendon or postero-inferior fibromuscular band to basal septum
Diagnostically may require isoprenaline to facilitate induction
27. Three Subtypes
28. Fascicular VT - Circuit
29. Purkinje and Pre-Purkinje Potentials
30. The Circuit - Electrograms
31. Diagnostic Pitt falls Robust VA conduction may cloud VA dissociation
Circuit may be entered via atrial pacing and cycle length of circuit re-set (entrained)
25% have concomitant inducible A-V accessory pathways with inducible SVT
32. Rapid atrial pacing required to dissociate A from V
33. Fascicular VT Rare mimics Inter-fascicular VT
RBBB and right or leftward axis
Structurally abnormal heart: Previous anterior infracts and LAFB or LPFB
A subtype of BBR VT
Idiopathic mitral annular VT
RBBB and rightward axis
Variable verapamil-sensitivity
Ill-defined
34. Fascicular VT - Treatment Treatment is cure 80% in single procedure
RF ablation during VT
Ablation at PP
Ablation at Pre-PP
RF ablation during sinus rhythm
Pace mapping
Electro anatomic mapping
35. RF Ablation During VT Purkinje potential target
Mapping the posterior LV septum, 1/3 distance from apex over 3 sq. cm.
PP identified and ablated
PP-QRS interval ~ 186 msec. for success
Entrainment from ablation site: Concealed fusion and
Post Pacing Interval VT Cycle Length < 30msec.
36. Ablation at Pre-Purkinje Potential site Higher risk of AV block or LBBB
Requires higher RF applications compared to a strategy targeting Purkinje potential
37. Ablation During Sinus Rhythm Tachycardia may be non-inducible or non-sustained
Pace mapping technique
A perfect pace map may not be essential for success
Successful ablation still occurred in (9.62.1)/12 ECG leads matched
Electro Anatomic mapping
Useful in those with recurrences
38. Bundle Branch Re-Entry Ventricular Tachycardia
39. BBR VT
Macro re-entrant (?Ventricular flutter) circuit employing
Both bundle branches
Ramifications of the left bundle
Hallmark: His-Purkinje system disease functional or structural
Acquired heart disease or apparently normal hearts
Ischemic (6%) vs. non-ischemic (40%) cardiac disease
40. Purkinje fibre Connexion Cx43 and Cardiomyopathy
Quantitative electro micrograph and immuno-labelling
Selective gap junction Cx43 remodelling
Decreased density (33%) in bordering scar and hibernating myocardium
Exquisite vulnerability of His-Purkinje system
Slowed conduction and fragmented depolarizing waveform
41. Akhtar and Damato 1973 antecubital vein approach
Ventricular extra-stimulus with a critical V-H delay blocked in the right bundle and activated the His via the left bundle
A V3 response conducted down via the right bundle with an H-V interval longer than that of sinus beat
Importantly complete RBBB abolished the V3 response
42. HPS integral to VT mechanism Critical V-H interval to initiate (HPS conduction delay)
Prolonged H-V
H-RB/LB-V-LB/RB activation sequence consistent with VT QRS morphology
H-H oscillations precede changes in V-V during VT
44. BBR VT and valve surgery Early (~3 weeks) post-operative state
Correlates with historical literature on post-op peak sudden death time-course
~30% as sole VT mechanism (spontaneous, sustained monomorphic. Non-VF)
Systolic function usually preserved
46. BBR VT Pitt Falls Exclusion of SVT with aberrancy
Need to prove A-V dissociation
Need to prove active HPS participation in the VT mechanism rather than passive participation
For BBR VT, entrainment from RV apex:
Post Pacing Interval Tachycardia Cycle Length < 30 msec.
47. BBR VT Differentials and Management Differentials
Intra-myocardial re-entry VT (ICM vs NICM)
Interfascicular VT (form of BBRVT) RBBB and LPFB
Intrafascicular VT (Idiopathic LV VT)
1:1 Supraventricular tachycardia with aberrancy
Atrio-fascicular re-entry (Mahaim)
Management
48. Issues His-Purkinje network
Sophisticated system
Pathology begets specific but diverse arrhythmic syndromes
Recognition is critical
Specific management
Terminology is crucial
49. Management1 Patient developed AF and hemodynamically stable VT during study
VT had RBBB and, after AF cardioversion, 1:1 V?A conduction
Atrial and ventricular programmed stimulation could not re-initiate VT
50. Management2 3-D left ventricular map constructed using Ensite NavX electroanatomic mapping
Pace mapping revealed earliest (pre-systolic) activation in mid posterior LV septum
4 x RF applications terminated VT without further recurrence
51. Summery Diagnosis
Idiopathic Left Ventricular Verapamil-sensitive VT arising from left posterior hemi-bundle
Management
Purkinje potential mapped between mid and apico posterior LV septum. Abnormal tissue ablated with subsequent cure
52. Outcome