1908 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
or emergence of new trigger sites outside the pulmonary veins
necessitate a repeat procedure in 10–30% of patients. Several alternative energy sources to create ablative lesions are being evaluated
for ablation of AF and other arrhythmias, including laser, external
beam radiation, and pulsed field electroporation.
In patients with paroxysmal AF, sinus rhythm is maintained for
>1 year after a single ablation procedure in ~70% of patients and
is achieved in >90% of patients after multiple procedures in some
studies. Many patients become more responsive to antiarrhythmic
drugs or become less symptomatic with a reduced AF burden after
a pulmonary vein isolation procedure, and thus, repeat ablation
may not be required for symptom control in some. Ablation is less
effective in patients with persistent AF, particularly long-standing
persistent AF, especially when associated with more extensive cardiac disease, comorbidities, and evidence of left atrial enlargement.
More extensive ablation is often required, targeting areas that likely
support reentry and/or AF maintenance and regions outside but
adjacent to the pulmonary venous antra. There is no proven strategy for selecting ablation targets outside the pulmonary vein antral
regions, and a variety of approaches have been pursued. Ablation
of areas of rapid activity during AF and creation of ablation lines to
block conduction across regions of the atria have not been proven
to improve outcomes in unselected patients. Other ablation targets
include non–pulmonary vein foci that fire in response to high-dose
isoproterenol, areas of atrial fibrosis, and regions with repetitive
rotational or focal activation during AF. More than one ablation
PV ectopy and fibrillation
isolated from the atrium
B
A
II
aVF
V1
Ls 10,1
Ls 8,9
Ls 7,8
Ls 6,7
Ls 5,6
Ls 4,5
Ls 3,4
Ls 2,3
Ls 1,2
FIGURE 251-4 A. Electroanatomic map superimposed on an MRI reconstruction of a left atrium with mapping catheter in the left common pulmonary vein and ablation
catheter at the pulmonary vein–left atrium junction. B. Spontaneous pulmonary vein (PV) ectopy initiating fibrillatory conduction contained within the isolated vein.
Atrial Fibrillation
1909CHAPTER 251
procedure is often required to maintain sinus rhythm in patients
with persistent and long-standing persistent AF because of lack of
lesion durability and complex atrial substrate with non–pulmonary
vein sources that may be incompletely treated at the initial ablation
session (Fig. 251-5).
Catheter ablation has a 2–7% risk of major procedure-related
complications, with the long-term trend suggesting steady improvement in complication rates. Complication rates are clearly lowest
with high-volume operators and centers. Complications including
stroke (0.5–1%), cardiac tamponade (1%), phrenic nerve paralysis, bleeding from femoral access sites, and fluid overload with
heart failure, which can emerge 1–3 days after the procedure. It
is important to recognize the potential for delayed presentation
of some complications. Ablation within the PV can lead to PV
stenosis, presenting weeks to months after the procedure with
dyspnea or hemoptysis. The esophagus abuts the posterior wall
of the left atrium where it is subject to injury, and esophageal
ulcers can form immediately after the procedure and may rarely
lead to a fistula between the left atrium and esophagus (estimated incidence of <0.1%) that presents as endocarditis and stroke
10 days to 3 weeks after the procedure. Early diagnosis of atrioesophageal fistula is important because delayed diagnosis leads to
likely death. Diagnosis is made by chest CT scan with water-soluble
oral and IV contrast. Endoscopy should be avoided in patients
with a suspected fistula because of the risk of air/esophageal fluid
embolus. Definitive repair of the atrioesophageal fistula with emergent surgery is required.
Surgical ablation of AF is most frequently performed concomitant with cardiac valve or coronary artery surgery and less
commonly as a stand-alone procedure. However, for patients with
persistent AF, surgical or hybrid procedures (a combination of a
surgical and catheter-based approach, most often in separate procedures) appear to have comparable efficacy to catheter ablation.
Risks include sinus node injury requiring pacemaker implantation
and higher morbidity with surgical ablation. Surgical removal of
the left atrial appendage may reduce stroke risk, although thrombus can form in the remnant of the appendage or if the appendage
is not completely ligated.
RISK FACTORS FOR AND LIFESTYLE
IMPACT ON ATRIAL FIBRILLATION
There is strong evidence that AF is associated with obesity, hypertension, alcohol use, and sleep apnea. Aggressive treatment of these risk
factors can substantially reduce AF episodes in some patients and is
warranted in all patients, as additional benefits to the patient are likely
beyond AF improvement. The amount of exercise appears to have a
complex relationship with the risk of AF development. In males, a
U-shaped curve exists, where AF risk is high among those with sedentary lifestyles and those who participate extensively in endurance
athletics such as long-distance running or cycling. Moderate exercise
appears to confer a lower risk of AF. On the other hand, in females, a
linear relationship exists between exercise and AF risk, with risk of AF
decreasing continuously with increasing exercise activity. Although
caffeine intake is often invoked as a risk for AF development or as a
trigger for AF episodes in patients with a known AF diagnosis, large
cohort studies have demonstrated, in contrast, a modest decrease in AF
risk with modest caffeine intake. Other proposed risk factors are being
evaluated, including psychological stress. Genetic predisposition to AF
is seen in those with first-degree relatives with AF, and a small subset of
AF patients can be determined have a familial form of AF.
There is emerging emphasis on an integrated approach to management of AF patients, with coordinated management of risk factor
modification, stroke prevention, rate control, rhythm control, and
management of associated comorbidities of critical importance.
Acknowledgment
Gregory F. Michaud and William G. Stevenson contributed to this chapter in the 20th edition, and some material from that chapter has been
retained here.
■ FURTHER READING
Blum S et al: Incidence and predictors of atrial fibrillation progression:
A systematic review and meta-analysis. Heart Rhythm 16:502, 2019.
Hindricks G et al: 2020 ESC guidelines for the diagnosis and management
of atrial fibrillation developed in collaboration with the European Association of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS). Eur Heart J 42:373, 2021.
January CT et al: 2019 AHA/ACC/HRS focused update of the 2014
AHA/ACC/HRS guideline for the management of patients with
Symptomatic AF
Paroxysmal AF
Consider patient choice
Antiarrhythmic
drugs
Catheter
ablation
Catheter
ablation
Catheter
ablation
Catheter
ablation
Antiarrhythmic
drugs
Antiarrhythmic
drugs
Antiarrhythmic
drugs
Failed drug therapy
Continue antiarrhythmic
drugs
No Yes No Yes
Continue antiarrhythmic
drugs
Perform catheter ablation Perform catheter ablation
(I) (IIa)
Perform
catheter
ablation
Perform
catheter
ablation
Perform
catheter
ablation
Perform
catheter
ablation
Failed drug therapy
Consider patient choice Consider patient choice Consider patient choice
(IIa) (IIb) (I)
Persistent AF without major
risk factors for AF recurrence
Persistent AF with major risk
factors for AF recurrence
Paroxysmal or persistent AF
and heart failure with
reduced EF
FIGURE 251-5 Rhythm control strategy for symptomatic atrial fibrillation (AF). This chart outlines the guideline-based management of patients with symptomatic atrial
fibrillation. As outlined in Table 251-1, the first step is determination of the temporal nature of the patient’s AF (paroxysmal vs persistent) and any associated risk factors for AF
recurrence, such as left atrial anatomic dimensions. A decision is then made regarding medical versus catheter ablation–based rhythm control, with recommendations for
when to consider catheter ablation based on guideline recommendations (class IIa for paroxysmal, IIb for persistent without major risks for recurrence, or AF of any sort in
patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction [EF], class I). Note the importance of patient choice, as well as the subsequent decisions to consider catheter ablation
if drugs have failed. (G Hindricks et al: 2020 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of atrial fibrillation developed in collaboration with the European Association of
Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS). Eur Heart J 42:17, 2020. (Translated and) Reprinted by permission of Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.)
1910 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
There are myriad types of ventricular arrhythmias (VAs), affecting patients
with normal hearts and those with structural heart disease ranging from
benign to life-threatening. An understanding of an approach to these
arrhythmias is critical to being appropriately parsimonious with benign
forms, while understanding an approach to the malignant forms.
252 Approach to Ventricular
Arrhythmias
William H. Sauer, Usha B. Tedrow
B
A
C
Art. Pr.
1000 ms
I
FIGURE 252-1 A. Unifocal premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) at bigeminal frequency. Trace shows electrocardiogram lead 1 and arterial pressure (Art. Pr.). Sinus
rhythm beats are followed by normal arterial waveform. The arterial pressure following premature beats is attenuated (arrows) and imperceptible to palpation. The pulse
in this patient is registered at half the heart rate. B. Multifocal PVCs. The two PVCs shown have different morphologies. C. Example of accelerated idioventricular rhythm.
(See text for details.)
atrial fibrillation: A report of the American College of Cardiology/
American Heart Association Task Force on Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Heart Rhythm Society in Collaboration with the Society
of Thoracic Surgeons. Circulation 140:e125, 2019.
Kirchhof P et al: Early rhythm-control therapy in patients with atrial
fibrillation. N Engl J Med 383:1305, 2020.
Packer DL et al: Effect of catheter ablation vs antiarrhythmic drug
therapy on mortality, stroke, bleeding, and cardiac arrest among
patients with atrial fibrillation: The CABANA randomized clinical
trial. JAMA 321:1261, 2019.
Valembois L et al: Antiarrhythmics for maintaining sinus rhythm
after cardioversion of atrial fibrillation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev
9:CD005049, 2019.
TYPES OF VAs
VAs can arise from focal sites of origin or from reentrant circuits.
Focal VAs can originate from myocardial or Purkinje cells capable
of automaticity or triggered activity. Reentrant VAs often involve
areas of scar such as old myocardial infarction or a cardiomyopathic
process. Less commonly, diseased Purkinje conduction pathways
can also result in reentrant circuits. VAs are characterized by their
electrocardiographic appearance and duration. Conduction away
from the ventricular focus or reentrant circuit exit, propagating
through the ventricular myocardium, is slower than activation of
the ventricles over the normal Purkinje system. For this reason, the
QRS complex duration during VAs will be wide, typically >0.12 s,
though there are unusual situations that can arise with narrow QRS
duration as well.
Premature ventricular beats (also referred to as a premature ventricular contractions [PVCs]) are single ventricular beats that fall earlier
than the next anticipated supraventricular beat (Fig. 252-1). PVCs that
originate from the same focus will have the same QRS morphology
and are referred to as unifocal (Fig. 252-1A). PVCs that originate from
different ventricular sites have different QRS morphologies and are
referred to as multifocal (Fig. 252-1B). Two consecutive ventricular
beats are ventricular couplets.
Ventricular tachycardia (VT) is three or more consecutive beats at
a rate faster than 100 beats/min. Three or more consecutive beats at
slower rates are designated an idioventricular rhythm. VT that terminates spontaneously within 30 s is designated nonsustained, whereas
sustained VT persists for >30 s or is terminated by an active intervention, such as administration of an intravenous medication, external
cardioversion, antitachycardia pacing, or a shock from an implanted
cardioverter defibrillator (Fig. 252-2).
Approach to Ventricular Arrhythmias
1911CHAPTER 252
I
II aVR V1 V4
V5 V2
V3 V6
aVL
aVF
II
III
V1
FIGURE 252-2 Repetitive monomorphic nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) of right ventricular outflow tract origin. The VT has a left bundle branch block pattern
with inferior axis with tall QRS complexes in the inferior leads.
Monomorphic VT has the same QRS complex from beat to beat,
indicating that the activation sequence is the same from beat to beat
and that each beat likely originates from the same source (Fig. 252-3A).
The initial site of ventricular activation largely determines the sequence
of ventricular activation. Therefore, the QRS morphology of PVCs and
monomorphic VT provides an indication of the site of origin within
the ventricles (Fig. 252-4). The likely origin often suggests whether an
arrhythmia is idiopathic or associated with structural disease. Arrhythmias that originate from the right ventricle or septum result in late
activation of much of the left ventricle, thereby producing a prominent
S wave in V1
referred to as a left bundle branch block–like configuration. Arrhythmias that originate from the free wall of the left ventricle
have a prominent positive deflection in V1
, thereby producing a right
bundle branch block–like morphology in V1
. The frontal plane axis of
the QRS is also useful. An axis that is directed inferiorly, as indicated
by dominant R waves in lead II, III, and AVF, suggests initial activation
of the cranial portion of the ventricle, whereas a frontal plane axis that
is directed superiorly (dominant S waves in II, III, and AVF) suggests
initial activation at the inferior wall.
Very rapid monomorphic VT has a sinusoidal appearance, also
called ventricular flutter, because it is not possible to distinguish the
QRS complex from the T wave (Fig. 252-3B). Relatively slow sinusoidal
VTs have a wide QRS indicative of slowed ventricular conduction
(Fig. 252-3C). Hyperkalemia, toxicity from excessive effects of drugs
that block sodium channels (e.g., flecainide, propafenone, or tricyclic
antidepressants), and severe global myocardial ischemia are possible
causes.
Polymorphic VT has a continually changing QRS morphology indicating a changing ventricular activation sequence. Polymorphic VT
that occurs in the context of congenital or acquired prolongation of the
QT interval often has a waxing and waning QRS amplitude, creating a
characteristic shifting axis referred to as torsades des pointes after the
classic ballet sequence (Fig. 252-3D).
Ventricular fibrillation (VF) has continuous irregular activation with
no discrete QRS complexes. Monomorphic or polymorphic VT may
transition to VF in susceptible patients. Cardiac ischemia is the most
common cause of VF (Fig. 252-3E).
The term idiopathic ventricular arrhythmia generally refers to PVCs
or VT that occurs in patients with a normal electrocardiogram (ECG),
without structural heart disease, and not associated with an underlying
genetic syndrome or risk of sudden death.
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Common symptoms of VAs include palpitations, dizziness, exercise
intolerance, episodes of lightheadedness, syncope, or sudden cardiac
arrest leading to sudden death if not resuscitated. VAs can also be
asymptomatic and encountered unexpectedly as an irregular pulse
or heart sounds on examination or may be seen on a routine ECG,
exercise test, or cardiac ECG monitoring. Occasionally when every
other beat is a PVC (bigeminy), pulse measurements for heart rate can
be erroneously low (pseudobradycardia) because the PVCs may not
generate a separate pulse wave.
Syncope is a concerning symptom, particularly when occurring
without prodrome, during exercise, or in the setting of abnormal ECG
or structural heart disease. Such episodes can be due to VT that produces severe hypotension, warranting concern for risk of cardiac arrest
and sudden death with arrhythmia recurrence. Although benign processes such as reflex-mediated neurocardiogenic (vasovagal) episodes
and orthostatic hypotension are the most common causes of syncope,
it is important to consider the possibility of underlying heart disease
or a genetic syndrome causing VT. When these are suspected, hospitalization for further evaluation and monitoring is often appropriate.
Sustained VT may present as a wide QRS complex tachycardia
that must be distinguished from supraventricular tachycardia with
aberrancy (Chap. 246). Symptoms can be minor but more commonly
include hypotension with syncope and even imminent cardiac arrest.
Sustained VT may degenerate to VF, particularly if it is rapid and polymorphic. Many patients who are at risk for VT have known heart disease, and many have an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). In
patients with an ICD, VT episodes may cause transient lightheadedness,
palpitations, or syncope followed by a shock from the ICD (see below).
EVALUATION OF PATIENTS WITH
DOCUMENTED OR SUSPECTED
VENTRICULAR ARRHYTHMIAS
There are several important considerations that guide evaluation of
patients with documented or suspected cardiac arrhythmias. First,
establish whether a VA is the cause of the symptoms or clinical
1912 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
A
B
C
D
E
FIGURE 252-3 A. Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT) with dissociated
P waves (short arrows). B. Ventricular flutter. C. Sinusoidal VT due to electrolyte
disturbance or drug effects. D. Polymorphic VT resulting from prolongation of QT
interval (torsade de pointe VT). E. Ventricular fibrillation. (See text for details.)
presentation. Second, determine whether the arrhythmia is associated
with a cardiac disease, and establish the prognostic significance of that
disease and, in particular, whether it is associated with a risk of sudden
cardiac death. Finally, define the likelihood of arrhythmia recurrence
and the symptoms and risk imposed by the recurrence. The risks of
cardiac arrest and sudden cardiac death are largely determined by the
cause of the arrhythmia and the associated underlying heart disease.
The diagnosis of VAs can be established by recording the arrhythmia
on an ECG, by an ambulatory or implanted cardiac monitor, by an
implanted rhythm management device such as a pacemaker or ICD, or
in some cases, initiation of the arrhythmia during an electrophysiologic
study. A 12-lead ECG of the arrhythmia should be obtained when possible and often provides clues to the potential site of origin and possible
presence of underlying heart disease (see above) (Fig. 252-4).
For patients with sustained wide-complex tachycardia, initial management is guided by the patient’s hemodynamic stability. The approach
to sustained wide-complex tachycardia is discussed in Chap. 254. The
management of VT that causes cardiac arrest is discussed in Chap.
306. Once hemodynamic stability is restored, further management is
guided by the possibility of a recurrence and the risk imposed by a
recurrence.
■ EVALUATION OF THE PATIENT WITH
ARRHYTHMIA SYMPTOMS
When symptoms are intermittent, initial evaluation aims to establish
symptom severity, provocative factors, and presence of underlying
heart disease. Syncope or near syncope raises concern that an arrhythmia is causing episodes of hypotension and that there may be a risk of
cardiac arrest. Symptoms that occur with exertion suggest arrhythmias
that are provoked by sympathetic stimulation but can also be related to
exertional ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease, although
non-arrhythmia causes must also be considered. A past history of any
cardiac disease is important. A review of all medications is relevant.
Medications that prolong the QT interval predispose to polymorphic
VT (Chap. 255). Adrenergic stimulants can provoke PVCs.
Family history should determine the presence of premature coronary artery disease, cardiomyopathy, or cardiac arrhythmias, particularly a history of sudden death. Family history may also suggest that a
possibility of a genetic cause of an arrhythmia warrants careful consideration. Details of premature deaths are relevant. Sudden death victims
are often said to have died of a “massive heart attack” despite absence
of definite confirmation of thrombotic myocardial infarction and when
other causes such as arrhythmia may have been possible.
The physical examination focuses on evidence of structural heart
disease with assessment of pulse, jugular venous pressure lung fields,
and cardiac auscultation. Stigmata of neuromuscular disease or dysmorphic features may suggest a genetic arrhythmia syndrome.
A 12-lead ECG should be obtained even if the patient is not having
symptoms at the time of evaluation. Occasionally, premature ventricular beats will be detected. Patients with benign idiopathic arrhythmias
usually have a completely normal ECG during sinus rhythm. Any
ECG abnormality warrants further evaluation. Particularly relevant
findings include Q waves that indicate prior myocardial infarction,
which may have been silent, and ventricular hypertrophy, which may
indicate hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or other ventricular disease. An
ECG finding is the major diagnostic manifestation of several genetic
arrhythmia syndromes in patients without structural heart disease,
including the long QT syndrome, Brugada syndrome, and short QT
syndrome.
If there is suspicion for structural heart disease, cardiac imaging is
warranted to assess ventricular function and structure. Transthoracic
echocardiography is most frequently employed for initial evaluation.
Depressed ventricular function increases concern for a risk of sudden
death and warrants further evaluation to establish the cause, which
may be cardiomyopathy, coronary artery disease, or valvular heart
disease. Ventricular thickening may indicate hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or infiltrative diseases such as amyloidosis. Cardiac MRI with
gadolinium contrast imaging provides similar assessment but also can
detect areas of ventricular scar, evident as regions of delayed hyperenhancement, which are usually present in patients who have sustained
monomorphic VT (Fig. 252-5). The nature and location of abnormalities are helpful in assessing the type of heart disease. Evaluation to
exclude atherosclerotic coronary artery disease should be performed
in patients at risk, guided by age and other risk factors.
■ TREATMENT OPTIONS FOR
VENTRICULAR ARRHYTHMIAS
Treatment of VAs is guided by the severity and frequency of symptoms.
For some, reassurance and removal of aggravating factors (e.g., caffeine) are all that is needed. For arrhythmias associated with a sudden
death risk, ICD implantation is usually indicated and will provide a
“safety net” to terminate life-threatening VT or VF, preventing sudden
death but without preventing the arrhythmia. When suppression of
the arrhythmia is required, antiarrhythmic drug therapy or catheter
ablation is a major consideration.
Approach to Ventricular Arrhythmias
1913CHAPTER 252
II
III
III
II
RV LV
V1 = LBBB
Septal or RV origin
V1 = RBBB
LV origin
V1
II, III AVF = Inferior axis
superior origin
II, III AVF = Superior axis
inferior origin
FIGURE 252-4 Site of ventricular tachycardia origin based on QRS morphology. (See text for details.)
LBBB, left bundle branch block; LV, left ventricle; RBBB, right bundle branch block; RV, right ventricle.
FIGURE 252-5 Imaging studies of the left ventricle (LV) used to assist ablation for ventricular tachycardia (VT). Left panel is an MRI image of a longitudinal section
demonstrating thinning of the anterior wall and late gadolinium enhancement in a subendocardial scar (white arrows). The middle panel shows a two-dimensional image
of the LV in long axis corresponding to the sector through the mid-LV (arrow in figure on right panel) obtained by an intracardiac echocardiography probe positioned in
the right ventricle. An electroanatomic three-dimensional map of the LV in the left anterior oblique projection is displayed in the right panel. The purple areas depict areas
of normal voltage (>1.5 mV). Blue, green, and yellow represent progressively lower voltages, with the red areas indicating scar (<0.5 mV). Channels of viable myocardium
with slow conduction within the scar are identified with the light blue dots. Areas of ablation delivered to regions involved in reentrant VT are indicated by maroon dots.
■ ANTIARRHYTHMIC DRUGS
Use of antiarrhythmic drugs is based on consideration of the risks and
potential benefit for the individual patient. Efficacy and side effects for
the individual patient are not predictable and are assessed by individual therapeutic trial. Adverse effects are mostly noncardiac and minor
but can sometimes be severe enough to limit their use. Cardiac side
effects, however, include the potential for “proarrhythmia,” whereby a
drug can increase the frequency of arrhythmia or cause a new arrhythmia. Aggravation of bradyarrhythmias is also a common concern.
Although antiarrhythmic drugs are classified based on their actions on
receptors or ion channels, most have multiple effects, affecting more
than one channel.
■ β-ADRENERGIC BLOCKERS
Many VAs are sensitive to sympathetic stimulation,
and β-adrenergic stimulation also diminishes the
electrophysiologic effects of many membrane-active
antiarrhythmic drugs. The safety of β-blocking agents
makes them the first choice of therapy for most VAs.
They are particularly useful for exercise-induced
arrhythmias and idiopathic arrhythmias but have
limited efficacy for most arrhythmias associated with
heart disease. Bradyarrhythmias and negative inotrophic effects are the major cardiac adverse effects.
■ CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS
The nondihydropyridine calcium channel blockers
diltiazem and verapamil can be effective for some
idiopathic VTs. The risk of proarrhythmia is low, but
they have negative inotropic and vasodilatory effects
that can aggravate hypotension.
■ SODIUM CHANNEL–BLOCKING
AGENTS
Drugs whose major effect is mediated through
sodium channel blockade include mexiletine, quinidine, disopyramide, flecainide, and propafenone,
which are available for chronic oral therapy. Blockade
of the fast inward sodium current has been referred
to as a class I antiarrhythmic drug effect. Antiarrhythmic actions are the result of depressing cardiac
conduction and membrane excitability. Conduction
slowing can be manifest as a prolongation of QRS
duration. Lidocaine, quinidine, and procainamide
are available as intravenous formulations. Quinidine,
disopyramide, and procainamide also have potassium
channel–blocking effects that prolong the QT interval
(class III antiarrhythmic drug action), contributing to
their antiarrhythmic effect. These agents have potential proarrhythmic
effects and, with the possible exception of quinidine, also have negative
inotropic effects that may have contributed to the increased mortality
observed when some were administered chronically to patients with
prior myocardial infarction. Long-term therapy is generally avoided in
patients with structural heart disease but may be used to reduce symptomatic arrhythmias in patients with ICDs.
■ POTASSIUM CHANNEL BLOCKING AGENTS
Sotalol and dofetilide block the delayed rectifier potassium channel IKr,
thereby prolonging action potential duration (QT interval) and the cardiac refractory period, known as the class III antiarrhythmic drug effect.
Sotalol also has nonselective β-adrenergic–blocking activity. It has been
1914 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
shown to have a modest effect on reducing ICD shocks due to ventricular
and atrial arrhythmias. Proarrhythmia due to the polymorphic VT torsade de pointe that is associated with QT prolongation occurs in 3–5% of
patients. Both sotalol and dofetilide are excreted via the kidneys, necessitating dose adjustment or avoidance in renal insufficiency. These drugs
must be avoided in patients with other risk factors for torsade de pointe,
including QT prolongation, hypokalemia, and significant bradycardia.
■ AMIODARONE
Amiodarone blocks multiple cardiac ionic currents and has sympatholytic activity. It is the most effective antiarrhythmic drug for
suppressing VAs. It is administered intravenously for life-threatening
arrhythmias. During chronic oral therapy, electrophysiologic effects
develop over several days. It is more effective than sotalol in reducing
ICD shocks and is often used for VAs in patients with heart disease.
Bradyarrhythmias are the major cardiac adverse effect. Ventricular
proarrhythmia can occur, but torsade de pointe VT is rare. Noncardiac toxicities are a major problem and contribute to drug discontinuation in at least a third of patients during long-term therapy.
Hyper- and hypothyroidism are related to the iodine content of the
drug. Pneumonitis or pulmonary fibrosis occurs in ~1% of patients.
Photosensitivity is common, and neuropathy and ocular toxicity can
occur. Systematic monitoring is recommended during chronic therapy
including assessment for thyroid, liver, and pulmonary toxicity. Intravenous administration of amiodarone via a peripheral vein for >24 h
can cause severe peripheral thrombophlebitis. Dronedarone has structural similarities to amiodarone but without the iodine moiety. Efficacy
for VAs is poor, and dronedarone increases mortality in patients with
heart failure, so dronedarone is not typically used for treatment of VAs.
■ IMPLANTABLE CARDIOVERTER DEFIBRILLATORS
ICDs detect sustained VT, largely based on heart rate, and then terminate the arrhythmia. In transvenous devices, VF is terminated by a
shock applied between a lead in the right ventricle and the ICD pulse
generator. The lead can provide pacing for bradycardia if needed. This
transvenous form of ICD has the disadvantages of vascular occlusion,
risk of lead fracture, endocarditis in the event of infection, and difficulty with removal. Monomorphic VT can also be terminated by a
burst of rapid pacing faster than the VT, known as antitachycardia
pacing (ATP) (Fig. 252-6A). If ATP fails or is not a programmed
treatment, as is often the case for rapid VT or VF, a shock is delivered
(Fig. 252-6B). ICDs can also be subcutaneous, without a transvenous
lead. The rhythm is also sensed by this lead, in a manner similar to a
surface ECG. The lead is placed overlying the left chest with a coil parallel to the sternum. Only shocks can be delivered from a subcutaneous
ICD, and pacing is not possible. No matter the type of ICD, shocks are
painful if the patient is conscious. ICDs are highly effective for termination of VT. The most common ICD complication is the delivery of
unnecessary therapy (either ATP or shocks) in response to an inappropriately detected rapid supraventricular tachycardia or electrical noise
as a result of an ICD lead fracture or electromagnetic interference from
an external source. ICDs record and store electrograms from arrhythmia episodes that can be retrieved by interrogation of the ICD, which
can be performed remotely and communicated via Internet. This
assessment is critical after an ICD shock to determine the arrhythmia
diagnosis and exclude an unnecessary therapy. Device infection is an
important problem long term and occurs in ~1% of patients. This risk
may be less for subcutaneous implants.
ICDs decrease mortality in patients at risk for sudden death due to
structural heart diseases. In all cases, ICDs are recommended only if
there is also expectation for survival of at least a year with acceptable
functional capacity. The exception is in cases of patients with endstage heart disease who are awaiting cardiac transplantation outside
the hospital or who have left bundle branch block QRS prolongation
such that they are likely to have improvement in ventricular function
with cardiac resynchronization therapy from a biventricular ICD
(Fig. 252-6C). In these cases, an ICD may be warranted despite guarded
prognosis. A wearable ICD system with electrodes incorporated into a
vest and an external battery pack is also available for short-term use in
patients pending decision regarding a permanent implanted system.
ICD shock
LV
lead
RV
lead
Atrial
lead
ICD
B C
Anti-tachycardia pacing
A
FIGURE 252-6 Implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) and therapies for ventricular arrhythmias. A. A monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT) is terminated by a
burst of pacing impulses at a rate faster than VT (anti-tachycardia pacing). B. A rapid VT is converted with a high-voltage shock (arrow). The chest x-ray in the panel C
shows the components of an ICD capable of biventricular pacing. ICD generator in the subcutaneous tissue of the left upper chest, pacing leads in the right atrium and the
left ventricular (LV) branch of the coronary sinus (LV lead) and a pacing/defibrillating lead in the right ventricle (RV lead) are shown.
Premature Ventricular Contractions, Nonsustained Ventricular Tachycardia, and Accelerated Idioventricular Rhythm
1915CHAPTER 253
Despite prompt termination of VT or VF by an ICD, the occurrence of these arrhythmias predicts subsequent increased mortality
and risk of heart failure. Occurrence of VT or VF should therefore
prompt assessment for potential causes including worsening heart
failure, electrolyte abnormalities, and ischemia. Repeated shocks, even
if appropriate, often induce posttraumatic stress disorder. Antiarrhythmic drug therapy, most commonly amiodarone, or catheter ablation is
often required for suppression of recurrent arrhythmias. Antiarrhythmic drug therapy can alter the VT rate and the energy required for
defibrillation, thereby necessitating programming changes in the ICD’s
algorithms for detection and therapy.
■ CATHETER ABLATION FOR VT
Catheter ablation is usually performed by applying radiofrequency
(RF) current to cause thermal injury by resistive heating of cardiac
tissue responsible for the arrhythmia. An electrode catheter with an
electroanatomic mapping system is used to map local electrical activity
to identify the ventricular myocardium that is causing the arrhythmia,
referred to as the arrhythmia substrate. The size and location of the
arrhythmia substrate determine the ease and likely effectiveness of the
procedure, as well as the potential complications. When the arrhythmia
originates from the endocardium, as is most commonly the case, it
can be reached from an endovascular approach via a femoral vein or
artery. Less commonly, arrhythmias originate from the subepicardium,
and percutaneous pericardial puncture, similar to pericardiocentesis,
is required to insert a catheter into the pericardial space for mapping
and ablation. In patients with scar-related VT due to prior infarction or
cardiomyopathy, ablation targets abnormal regions in the scar. Because
these scars often contain multiple reentry circuits over relatively large
regions, extensive areas of ablation are required, and these areas are
often identified as regions of low voltage displayed on anatomic reconstructions of the ventricle (Fig. 252-5).
Catheter ablation is often performed in patients with recurrent
VAs associated with poor cardiac function, and the procedure-related
mortality in this situation is 0.5–3%. Outcomes are better for patients
with prior infarction and VT than for patients with nonischemic cardiomyopathies in which the scar locations are more variable and often
intramural or subepicardial. Ablation can be lifesaving for patients with
very frequent or incessant VT. Methods of delivering ablative energy to
intramural areas or areas requiring very extensive ablation are under
development. These include needle catheters capable of delivering
ablative energy into intramural sources. Stereotactic body radiation
therapy (SBRT), classically used for treating thoracic tumors, has been
used to direct radiation therapy to a specific portion of the scar substrate to noninvasively ablate VT with encouraging early studies.
Idiopathic VTs and PVCs that occur in the absence of structural
heart disease usually originate from a small focus, for which catheter
ablation typically has a higher success rate for preventing recurrent
arrhythmia. Long-term arrhythmia-free survival in these patients is
excellent.
ARRHYTHMIA SURGERY
When antiarrhythmic drug therapy and catheter ablation fail or are not
an option, surgical cryoablation, often combined with aneurysmectomy, can be effective therapy for recurrent VT due to prior myocardial
infarction and has also been used successfully in a few patients with
nonischemic heart disease. Few centers now maintain the expertise for
this therapy, though some use this therapy as an adjunct to ventricular
assist device implantation.
Acknowledgment
Roy M. John and William G. Stevenson contributed to this chapter in
the 20th edition, and some material from that chapter has been retained
here.
■ FURTHER READING
Al-Khatib SM et al: 2017 AHA/ACC/HRS guideline for management
of patients with ventricular arrhythmias and the prevention of sudden cardiac death: A report of the American College of Cardiology/
American Heart Association Task Force on Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Heart Rhythm Society. Heart Rhythm 15:e73,2018.
Callans DJ: Josephson’s Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology: Techniques
and Interpretations, 6th ed. Philadelphia, Wolters Kluwer, 2021.
Cronin EM et al: 2019 HRS/EHRA/APHRS/LAHRS expert consensus statement on catheter ablation of ventricular arrhythmias. EP
Europace 21:1143, 2019.
Jalife J, Stevenson W (eds): Zipes and Jalife’s Cardiac Electrophysiology: From Cell to Bedside, 8th ed. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2021.
Ventricular ectopic beats are very common and may be identified
during outpatient or inpatient telemetry monitoring either due to
symptoms of palpitations or as an incidental finding. In most cases,
ventricular ectopy, presenting as premature ventricular contractions
(PVCs), nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT), and accelerated
idioventricular rhythm (AIVR), is asymptomatic and does not require
specific treatment. While most commonly benign when presenting
in patients with structurally normal hearts and normal ECGs, these
ventricular arrhythmias can rarely be associated with structural heart
disease and a risk of sudden death.
PREMATURE VENTRICULAR
CONTRACTIONS AND NON-SUSTAINED VT
PVCs are very common and can be due to enhanced automaticity,
triggered automaticity, or reentry. PVCs are often sensitive to sympathetic stimulation and can be a sign of increased sympathetic tone,
myocardial ischemia, hypoxia, electrolyte abnormalities, or underlying
heart disease. During myocardial ischemia or in association with other
structural heart disease, PVCs can be a harbinger of sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation (VF).
The electrocardiogram (ECG) characteristics of the arrhythmia are
often suggestive of whether structural heart disease is present. PVCs
with smooth uninterrupted contours and sharp QRS deflections may
suggest an ectopic focus in relatively normal myocardium, whereas
broad notching and slurred QRS deflections may suggest a diseased
myocardial substrate. The QRS morphology also suggests the likely site
of origin within the ventricle. PVCs that have a dominant S wave in V1
,
referred to as a left bundle branch block–like configuration, originate
from the right ventricle or interventricular septum. Those with a dominant R wave in V1
originate from the left ventricle. A superior frontal
plane axis (negative in II, III, aVF) indicates initial depolarization of
the inferior wall (diaphragmatic aspect of the heart), whereas an inferior frontal plane axis (positive in II, III, aVF) indicates an origin in the
cranial aspect of the heart. The location of arrhythmia origin often suggests the nature of underlying heart disease. Most common ventricular
arrhythmias that are not associated with structural heart disease have a
left bundle branch block–like configuration. PVCs with a right bundle
branch block configuration are more likely to be associated with structural heart disease. Multiple morphologies of PVCs (multifocal PVCs)
are also more likely to indicate structural heart disease or a myopathic
253 Premature Ventricular
Contractions, Nonsustained
Ventricular Tachycardia, and
Accelerated Idioventricular
Rhythm
William H. Sauer, Usha B. Tedrow
1916 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
disease process. In patients with heart disease, greater frequency and
complexity (couplets and NSVT) of these arrhythmias are associated
with more severe disease.
PVCs AND NSVT DURING ACUTE ILLNESS
These arrhythmias are often encountered in patients who are being
evaluated in the emergency department or who have been hospitalized
and are on a cardiac monitor. When encountered during acute illness
or as a new finding, evaluation should focus on detection and correction of potential aggravating factors and causes, specifically myocardial
ischemia, ventricular dysfunction, and electrolyte abnormalities, most
commonly hypokalemia. If there is a suspicion of underlying heart
disease, then this should be evaluated. Otherwise, asymptomatic PVCs
and NSVT in the hospitalized patient do not indicate any specific treatment outside the patient’s presenting illness.
PVCs AND NSVT IN PATIENTS WITHOUT
HEART DISEASE
Idiopathic ventricular arrhythmias frequently originate from the left
or right ventricular outflow tracts near the valve annuli, giving rise to
PVCs or VT that have a left bundle branch block–like configuration,
with an inferiorly directed frontal plane axis, as discussed below. Other
regions that give rise to PVCs in normal hearts include the papillary
muscles and fascicular tissue. NSVT from a benign idiopathic source
is usually monomorphic, with rates <200 beats/min. NSVT that is very
rapid, polymorphic, or with a first beat that occurs prior to the peak
of the T wave (“short-coupled”) is uncommon and should prompt
concern and careful evaluation for underlying disease or genetic syndromes associated with sudden death.
A family history of sudden death should prompt evaluation for
genetic syndromes associated with sudden death, including cardiomyopathy, long QT syndrome, and arrhythmogenic right ventricular
cardiomyopathy (ARVC) (see below). Any abnormality on the 12-lead
ECG warrants further evaluation. Repolarization abnormalities are
seen in a number of genetically determined syndromes associated with
sudden death, including the long QT syndrome, Brugada syndrome,
ARVC, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (Fig. 253-1). Structural
abnormalities such as mitral valve prolapse and mitral annular disjunction can be associated with papillary muscle PVCs and sudden death.
An echocardiogram is often necessary to assess ventricular function,
B
V3
V2
V1
A
V3
V2
V1
FIGURE 253-1 Electrocardiogram leads depicting Brugada syndrome. Precordial chest leads V1
–V3
showing
typical abnormalities of arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) (A) and Brugada syndrome
(B). In ARVC, there is T inversion and delayed ventricular activation manifest as epsilon waves (arrows). Panel
B shows ST elevation in V1
and V2
typical of the Brugada syndrome.
wall motion abnormalities, and valvular heart disease. Contrastenhanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is also useful for
this purpose and for the detection of ventricular scarring that is the
substrate for sustained VT. Exercise stress testing should be performed
in patients with effort-related symptoms and for those at risk for coronary artery disease.
TREATMENT OF IDIOPATHIC
ARRHYTHMIAS
For PVCs and NSVT in the absence of structural heart disease or a
genetic sudden death syndrome, no specific therapy is needed unless
the patient has significant symptoms or evidence that frequent PVCs
are depressing ventricular function (see below). Reassurance that the
arrhythmia is benign is often sufficient to allow the patient to cope
with the symptoms, which will often wax and wane in frequency over
years. Avoiding stimulants, such as caffeine and alcohol, is helpful in
some patients. If symptoms require treatment, β-adrenergic blockers
and nondihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (verapamil and
diltiazem) are sometimes helpful. If these fail, more membrane active
antiarrhythmic drugs and catheter ablation are options. The antiarrhythmic agents flecainide, propafenone, mexiletine, and amiodarone
can be effective, but the potential for side effects warrants careful consideration prior to prescribing these agents for long-term use. Catheter
ablation is effective at suppressing this arrhythmia in ~90% of patients.
Failure of ablation is usually due to inability to provoke the arrhythmia
for mapping in the electrophysiology laboratory or if the site of origin
is near a vital structure, such as the coronary arteries or His-Purkinje
system, or is not accessible due to a site of origin deep within the
myocardium.
PVCs AND NSVT ASSOCIATED WITH ACUTE
CORONARY SYNDROMES
In the peri-infarct period, PVCs and NSVT are common and can be
an early manifestation of ischemia and a harbinger of subsequent VF.
Treatment with β-adrenergic blockers and correction of hypokalemia
and hypomagnesemia reduce the risk of VF. Routine administration of
antiarrhythmic drugs such as lidocaine or amiodarone does not reduce
mortality and is not indicated for suppression of PVCs or asymptomatic NSVT but may be implemented transiently if an episode of
sustained VT or VF occurs, with the goal of reducing the likelihood of
a subsequent episode.
Following recovery from acute myocardial
infarction (MI), frequent PVCs (typically >10
PVCs/h), repetitive PVCs with couplets, and
NSVT are markers for depressed ventricular
function and increased mortality, but routine
antiarrhythmic drug therapy to suppress these
arrhythmias has not been shown to improve
mortality. Therefore, amiodarone is an option
for treatment of symptomatic arrhythmias in
this population when the potential benefit outweighs its potential toxicities. β-Adrenergic
blockers reduce sudden death but have limited
effect on spontaneous arrhythmias.
For survivors of an acute MI, an implantable
cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) reduces mortality in certain high-risk groups: patients who
have survived >40 days after the acute MI and
have a left ventricular ejection fraction of <30%,
or who have an ejection fraction <35% and have
symptomatic heart failure (functional class II or
III); and patients >5 days after MI who have a
reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, NSVT,
and inducible sustained VT or VF on electrophysiologic testing. ICDs do not reduce total
mortality when routinely implanted early after
MI and have not been demonstrated to improve
mortality when implanted early after coronary
artery revascularization.
Premature Ventricular Contractions, Nonsustained Ventricular Tachycardia, and Accelerated Idioventricular Rhythm
1917CHAPTER 253
PVCs AND NSVT ASSOCIATED WITH
DEPRESSED VENTRICULAR FUNCTION
AND HEART FAILURE
PVCs and NSVT are common in patients with depressed ventricular
function and heart failure and are markers for disease severity and
increased mortality, but antiarrhythmic drug therapy to suppress these
arrhythmias has not been shown to improve survival. The use of antiarrhythmic drugs whose major action is blockade of the cardiac sodium
channel (flecainide, propafenone, mexiletine, quinidine, and disopyramide) is avoided in patients with structural heart disease because of
a risk of proarrhythmia and negative inotropic effects. Amiodarone
suppresses ventricular ectopy and reduces sudden death but does not
improve overall survival. ICDs are the major therapy to protect against
sudden death in patients at high risk and are recommended for those
with a left ventricular ejection fraction <35% and New York Heart
Association class II or III heart failure, in whom they reduce mortality
from 36 to 29% over 5 years.
PVC AND NSVT ASSOCIATED WITH OTHER
CARDIAC DISEASES
Ventricular ectopy is associated with increased mortality in patients
with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or with congenital heart disease
associated with right or left ventricular dysfunction. In these patients,
management is similar to that for patients with ventricular dysfunction. Pharmacologic suppression of the arrhythmia has not been shown
to improve mortality. ICDs are indicated for patients considered at high
risk for sudden cardiac death.
PVC-INDUCED VENTRICULAR
DYSFUNCTION
Very frequent ventricular ectopy and repetitive NSVT can depress
ventricular function, possibly through an effect similar to chronic
tachycardia or by inducing ventricular dyssynchrony. Depression of
ventricular function rarely occurs unless PVCs account for at least
10–20% of total beats over a 24-h period, and only a minority of
patients with PVCs will have a reversible cardiomyopathy. Often the
PVCs are idiopathic and unifocal, most commonly originating from the
outflow tract regions or left ventricular papillary muscles (Fig. 253-2),
where they can be targeted for ablation.
Other sites of origin such as the mitral and tricuspid valve annuli,
right ventricular moderator band, and even the epicardial surface
of the heart also occur (Fig. 253-3). The factors that can potentially
predict development of heart failure and increased risk of adverse outcomes include PVC frequency, characteristics of the PVC morphology,
and timing of the PVC coupling interval. In addition, the presence of
late gadolinium enhancement on cardiac MRI may suggest the presence of an additional underlying cardiomyopathic process. The degree
of expected recovery of ventricular function with PVC suppression is
difficult to predict. Even in the setting of known underlying cardiomyopathy, controlling frequent ventricular ectopy can be helpful to
improve ejection fraction and improve other factors such as delivery of
resynchronization pacing.
ACCELERATED IDIOVENTRICULAR
RHYTHMS
Three or more ventricular beats at a rate slower than 100 beats/min are
termed an AIVR (Fig. 253-4). Automaticity is the likely mechanism,
although in some rare cases, a reentrant circuit utilizing diseased myocardium can cause AIVR. Idioventricular rhythms are common during
acute MI and may emerge during sinus bradycardia. Often, they are
not symptomatic, but hemodynamic compromise may occur with the
loss of atrioventricular synchrony in susceptible patients. Atropine may
be administered to increase the sinus rates if this is a concern. This
rhythm is also common in patients with cardiomyopathies or sleep
apnea. It can also be idiopathic, often emerging when the sinus rate
slows during sleep. Therapy should target any underlying cause and
correction of bradycardia. Specific antiarrhythmic therapy for asymptomatic idioventricular rhythm is not necessary.
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Recently, it has been appreciated that inflammation plays a role in
the genesis of PVCs in specific patients with inflammatory cardiomyopathies and even in inherited cardiomyopathies. The roles of early
identification of this process and targeted treatment are areas of active
research.
GE
III
II
I
aVF
aVL
aVR
V3
V2
V1
V6
V5
V4
FIGURE 253-2 Ventricular bigeminy with premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) originating from the posteromedial papillary muscle. Twelve-lead electrocardiogram
showing normal sinus rhythm with ventricular bigeminy. The PVCs have a right bundle branch block configuration in V1
with superiorly directed axis. The leads V4
–V6
are
negative. The configuration is consistent with a PVC origin in the posteromedial papillary muscle of the left ventricle.
1918 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
FIGURE 253-3 Catheter ablation of premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) from the left ventricular outflow tract. Shown is an electroanatomic map on the left and PVC
morphology with superimposed pacing morphology on the right. The left ventricle is seen from the atrial side (posteriorly), and an ablation catheter is seen passing through
the aortic valve at the top of the electroanatomic map and contacting the anterolateral portion of the left ventricular outflow tract. Maroon dots are ablation lesions that have
been delivered at the site of interest. Pacing from the site of interest generates a QRS complex very similar to the clinical PVC as seen on the right.
V1
V1
V2
V3
aVR
aVL
aVF
I
II
III
V4
V5
V6
FIGURE 253-4 Accelerated idioventricular rhythm. Shown is an example of a slow regular wide-complex rhythm. Fusion beats are seen on complexes 4 and 10, which are
more positive in lead V1
and narrower than the rest of the beats. These features are consistent with an accelerated idioventricular rhythm.
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