Circulation, Vol 70, 632-637, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
NH Marcus, RA Falcone, AH Harken, ME Josephson and MB Simson
We studied 37 patients undergoing endocardial resection for medically
refractory ventricular tachycardia (VT). Each was studied before and after
surgery by programmed ventricular stimulation and signal-averaged
electrocardiography. Low-amplitude late potentials were identified
preoperatively in 76% of patients. In the 24 patients without postoperative
VT the effect of surgery was to shorten the filtered QRS duration (137 +/-
27 to 121 +/- 26 msec; p = .003), increase the voltage in the last 40 msec
of the filtered QRS (16.5 +/- 16.1 to 39.0 +/- 29.4 microV; p = .003), and
decrease the incidence of late potentials (71% to 33%; p = .03). The
filtered QRS complex was unchanged in 13 patients whose VT persisted after
surgery. No preoperative variable predicted which patients would not have
inducible VT after surgery. However, loss of a late potential after surgery
in nine of 10 patients was associated with absence of inducible VT (p less
than .02). Loss of a late potential was not necessary for surgical success.
Eight of 18 patients with a persistent late potential did not have
inducible VT. The signal-averaged electrocardiogram predicted a successful
outcome after endocardial resection if the late potential was no longer
present.
ARTICLES
Body surface late potentials: effects of endocardial resection in patients with ventricular tachycardia
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