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An approach to help differentiate postinfarct scar from borderzone tissue using Ripple Mapping during ventricular tachycardia ablation.

Authors :
Khanra D
Calvert P
Hughes S
Waktare J
Modi S
Hall M
Todd D
Mahida S
Gupta D
Luther V
Source :
Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology [J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol] 2023 Mar; Vol. 34 (3), pp. 664-672. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jan 12.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Ventricular scar is traditionally highlighted on a bipolar voltage (BiVolt) map in areas of myocardium <0.50 mV. We describe an alternative approach using Ripple Mapping (RM) superimposed onto a BiVolt map to differentiate postinfarct scar from conducting borderzone (BZ) during ventricular tachycardia (VT) ablation.<br />Methods: Fifteen consecutive patients (left ventricular ejection fraction 30 ± 7%) underwent endocardial left ventricle pentaray mapping (median 5148 points) and ablation targeting areas of late Ripple activation. BiVolt maps were studied offline at initial voltage of 0.50-0.50 mV to binarize the color display (red and purple). RMs were superimposed, and the BiVolt limits were sequentially reduced until only areas devoid of Ripple bars appeared red, defined as RM-scar. The surrounding area supporting conducting Ripple wavefronts in tissue <0.50 mV defined the RM-BZ.<br />Results: RM-scar was significantly smaller than the traditional 0.50 mV cutoff (median 4% vs. 12% shell area, p < .001). 65 ± 16% of tissue <0.50 mV supported Ripple activation within the RM-BZ. The mean BiVolt threshold that differentiated RM-scar from BZ tissue was 0.22 ± 0.07 mV, though this ranged widely (from 0.12 to 0.35 mV). In this study, septal infarcts (7/15) were associated with more rapid VTs (282 vs. 347 ms, p = .001), and had a greater proportion of RM-BZ to RM-scar (median ratio 3.2 vs. 1.2, p = .013) with faster RM-BZ conduction speed (0.72 vs. 0.34 m/s, p = .001). Conversely, scars that supported hemodynamically stable sustained VT (6/15) were slower (367 ± 38 ms), had a smaller proportion of RM-BZ to RM-scar (median ratio 1.2 vs. 3.2, p = .059), and slower RM-BZ conduction speed (0.36 vs. 0.63 m/s, p = .036). RM guided ablation collocated within 66 ± 20% of RM-BZ, most concentrated around the RM-scar perimeter, with significant VT reduction (median 4.0 episodes preablation vs. 0 post, p < .001) at 11 ± 6 months follow-up.<br />Conclusion: Postinfarct scars appear significantly smaller than traditional 0.50 mV cut-offs suggest, with voltage thresholds unique to each patient.<br /> (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1540-8167
Volume :
34
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36478627
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jce.15766