李甲坤

中国医学科学院阜外医院

Electrophysiological Characteristics and Ablation Outcomes in Patients With Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia.

BACKGROUND:Catheter ablation of premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) that trigger polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (PVT) or ventricular fibrillation has been reported as a novel therapy to reduce the syncope events in patients with catecholaminergic PVT, whereas the long-term ablation outcome and its value in improving exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias remain unclear.METHODS AND RESULTS:Fourteen consecutive selected patients with catecholaminergic PVT (mean±SD age, 16±6 years; 43% male patients) treated with maximum β-blockers with no possibility of adding flecainide were prospectively enrolled for catheter ablation. The primary end point was syncope recurrence, and the secondary end point was the reduction of the ventricular arrhythmia score during exercise testing. Twenty-six PVT/ventricular fibrillation-triggering PVCs were identified for ablation. The trigger beats arose from the left ventricle in 50% of the cases and from both ventricles in 36% of the cases. Purkinje potentials were observed at 27% of the targets. After a mean follow-up of 49 months after ablation, 8 (57%) patients were free from syncope recurrence. Ablation of trigger beat significantly reduced the syncope frequency (mean±SD, 4.3±1.6 to 0.5±0.8 events per year; P<0.001) and improved the ventricular arrhythmia scores at the 3-month (5 [range, 3-6] to 1.5 [range, 0-5]; P=0.002) and 12-month (5 [range, 3-6] to 2 [range, 0-5]; P=0.014) follow-ups. The induction of nontriggering PVCs postablation was closely associated with syncope recurrence (hazard ratio, 6.8 [95% CI, 1.3-35.5]; P=0.026).CONCLUSIONS:Catheter ablation of PVT/ventricular fibrillation-triggering PVCs in patients with catecholaminergic PVT who cannot receive flecainide treatment seems to be a safe and feasible adjunctive treatment that may reduce the syncope burden and improve exercise-related ventricular arrhythmias. Induction of nontriggering PVCs after ablation is associated with a higher risk of syncope recurrence.

5.4
1区

Journal of the American Heart Association 2023

Characteristics of deceleration capacity and deceleration runs in vasovagal syncope.

PURPOSE:Increased vagal activity plays a prominent role in vasovagal syncope (VVS). The aim of this study was to characterize vagal function in VVS by evaluating the heart rate (HR) deceleration capacity (DC) and the HR deceleration runs (DRs) in patients with VVS between attacks.METHODS:A total of 188 consecutive VVS patients were enrolled in the study, of whom 129 had positive head-up tilt test (HUTT); 132 healthy participants were enrolled as controls. DC, DRs (DR2, i.e., episodes of 2 consecutive beat-to-beat HR decelerations), and the sum of DR8-10 (very long DR [VLDR]) were calculated using 24-h electrograms. Clinical characteristics, DC, and DRs were compared among syncope groups and controls.RESULTS:Patients with VVS had higher DC (10.63 ± 2.1 vs. 6.58 ± 1.7 ms; P < 0.001) and lower minimum HR and DR6-10 than controls. No significant differences in DC or DR6-10 were found between the patients with positive and those with negative HUTT results. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, minimum HR ≥ 40 bpm (odds ratio [OR] 0.408, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.167-0.989; P = 0.048), daytime DC ≥ 7.37 ms (OR 3.040, 95% CI 1.220-7.576; P = 0.013), and VLDR ≥ 0.046% (OR 0.306, 95% CI 0.138-0.679; P = 0.004) were demonstrated to be risk factors significantly associated with VVS.CONCLUSION:Compared to healthy controls, patients with VVS demonstrated distinct HR deceleration profiles between attacks, including overall higher DC and lower DR6-10.

5.8
3区
第一作者

Clinical autonomic research : official journal of the Clinical Autonomic Research Society 2023

The Mechanism of Cardiac Sympathetic Activity Assessment Methods: Current Knowledge.

This review has summarized the methods currently available for cardiac sympathetic assessment in clinical or under research, with emphasis on the principles behind these methodologies. Heart rate variability (HRV) and other methods based on heart rate pattern analysis can reflect the dominance of sympathetic nerve to sinoatrial node function and indirectly show the average activity level of cardiac sympathetic nerve in a period of time. Sympathetic neurotransmitters play a key role of signal transduction after sympathetic nerve discharges. Plasma or local sympathetic neurotransmitter detection can mediately display sympathetic nerve activity. Given cardiac sympathetic nerve innervation, i.e., the distribution of stellate ganglion and its nerve fibers, stellate ganglion activity can be recorded either directly or subcutaneously, or through the surface of the skin using a neurophysiological approach. Stellate ganglion nerve activity (SGNA), subcutaneous nerve activity (SCNA), and skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA) can reflect immediate stellate ganglion discharge activity, i.e., cardiac sympathetic nerve activity. These cardiac sympathetic activity assessment methods are all based on the anatomy and physiology of the heart, especially the sympathetic innervation and the sympathetic regulation of the heart. Technological advances, discipline overlapping, and more understanding of the sympathetic innervation and sympathetic regulation of the heart will promote the development of cardiac sympathetic activity assessment methods.

3.6
3区
第一作者

Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine 2022