Amneet Sandhu

and 12 more

Background: Ventricular tachycardia (VT) remains a leading cause of morbidity and sudden death. Improvements in catheter ablation have significantly advanced this option as a treatment method for refractory VT. Despite advances, use and impact of inotrope and vasodepressor medicines as part of intraprodcedural management during VT ablation have been understudied. Methods: We conducted a exploratory, retrospective analysis of consecutive patients undergoing VT ablation. Patient, intra and peri-procedural data, focusing on pressor use and hemodynamics through ablation, and procedural endpoint data were collected. Results: From 2014-2017, 149 patients underwent VT ablation of which 67% exhibited cardiomyopathy (53% ischemic). Most procedures (71%) were conducted under general anesthesia. In those with cardiomyopathy, steady-state use of dobutamine and dopamine was more common though substantial use of phenylephrine was noted. In adjusted analyses, (1) dobutamine was associated with increased procedure time (402.5±18.8 vs 347.2±14.0 min, p = 0.03), (2) dopamine was associated with increased number of distinct VTs (2.8 vs. 2.2, p<0.001) while both dopamine and dobutamined resulted in increased intra-procedural cardioversions (1.3 vs. 0.6, p<0.001 and 1.34 vs. 0.66, p=0.001, respectively) and (3) dobutamine dose exhibited a linear correlation with post-ablation length of stay. Conclusions: In this exploratory work, we sought to understand effects of hemodynamic drug use on short-term, procedural outcomes of VT ablation. Salient findings include: (1) arrhythmogenic nature of inotropes resulting in an increase in intraprocedural cardioversions, (2) greater propensity for induction of non-clinical VTs with use of intraprocedural dopamine and (3) substantial use of phenylephrine in those with underlying cardiomyopathy.

Shu Chang

and 11 more

Background: Patients with a history of mitral valve (MV) surgery can present with unique challenges during left atrial (LA) ablation due to abnormal atrial substrate and descriptions of ablation in this cohort is limited. We aim to evaluate LA ablation characteristics and outcomes in patients with a history of mitral valve surgery. Objective: We hypothesize that the success rate for ablations of LA arrhythmias in patients with prior MV surgery will be inferior to patients without prior MV surgery due to left atriopathy, presence of a MV prosthesis, and a higher burden of pre-ablation LA scar. Methods: In this single center, retrospective study, we evaluated patients who had a history of MV surgery and underwent LA ablation between January 2013 and May 2019. We analyzed baseline patient characteristics, type of MV disease and surgery, available pre-ablation voltage maps, and ablation outcomes. Results: We present a series of 20 patients who underwent a total of 30 LA ablation procedures. All 20 patients underwent pulmonary vein isolation and 11 patients also underwent ablation for LA macro-reentrant flutters. The majority of the patients (55%) were without recurrent documented arrhythmias at a mean follow-up of 22 months post-ablation. Two patients had acutely unsuccessful ablation. Conclusions: Although LA ablation in patients with previous MV surgery can be challenging due to abnormal atrial substrate and the presence of the valve prosthesis, the majority of patients in our cohort experienced atrial arrhythmia free survival at a mean follow-up of 22 months.