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Frequent Ventricular Ectopy: Implications and Outcomes

Authors :
Haris M. Haqqani
Tomos E. Walters
Adam Lee
Edward P. Gerstenfeld
Source :
Heart, lungcirculation. 28(1)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Frequent ventricular ectopy is a common clinical presentation in patients suffering idiopathic ventricular outflow tract arrhythmias. These are focal arrhythmias that generally occur in patients without structural heart disease and share a predilection for characteristic anatomic sites of origin. Mechanistically, they are generally due to cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-mediated triggered activity. As a result, there is typically an exercise or catecholamine related mode of induction and often a sensitivity to suppression with adenosine. Treatment options include clinical surveillance, medical therapy with anti-arrhythmic agents or catheter ablation. Medical therapy may offer symptomatic benefit but may have side-effects and usually results in burden reduction rather than eradication of ectopy. Catheter ablation using contemporary mapping techniques, whilst associated with some inherent procedural risk, is a potentially curative and safe option in most patients. Although usually associated with a good prognosis, some patients may develop an ectopy-mediated cardiomyopathy or, rarely, ectopy-induced polymorphic ventricular arrhythmias; catheter ablation is the treatment of choice in those patients.

Details

ISSN :
14442892
Volume :
28
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart, lungcirculation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e772f564973809b168009c3ad0d6040