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Human Histopathology of Electroanatomic Mapping After Cooled‐Tip Radiofrequency Ablation to Treat Ventricular Tachycardia in Remote Myocardial Infarction
Author(s) -
DENEKE THOMAS,
MÜLLER KLAUSMICHAEL,
LEMKE BERND,
LAWO THOMAS,
CALCUM BERND,
HELWING MARLENE,
MÜGGE ANDREAS,
GREWE PETER H.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.193
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1540-8167
pISSN - 1045-3873
DOI - 10.1111/j.1540-8167.2005.40826.x
Subject(s) - medicine , ventricular tachycardia , ablation , cardiology , catheter ablation , myocardial infarction , fibrosis , radiofrequency ablation , tachycardia , coagulative necrosis
Catheter ablation of ventricular tachycardia (VT) in remote myocardial infarction (MI) often requires excessive mapping procedures. Documentation of the electrical substrate via electrogram amplitude may help to identify regions of altered myocardium resembling exit areas of reentrant VTs. Methods and Results: A patient with multiple symptomatic monomorphic VTs (biventricular ICD, remote MI) underwent electroanatomic substrate mapping (CARTO™) for VT ablation. Regions of scar (bipolar electrogram amplitudes ≤0.5 mV), normal myocardium (≥1.5 mV), and “altered” myocardium (0.5–1.5 mV) were identified. Ablation was directed to regions with “altered” myocardium based on pace map correlation. After ablation the clinical VT did not reoccur. The patient died due to worsening of heart failure 7 days afterward. During postmortal evaluation specified sites of electroanatomic mapping were correlated to histopathological findings. Annotated scar areas were documented to consist of areas with massive fibrosis (≥80% of mural composition). Ablations were found to span through regions with intermediate fibrosis (21–79%) mapped as “altered” myocardium. Ablation produced transmural coagulation necrosis of mesh‐like fibrotic tissue with interspersed remnants of myocardial cells up to a maximum depth of 7.0 mm. Subendocardial intramural bleedings were universal findings 7 days after ablation. Conclusions: Electroanatomic substrate mapping for VT ablation sufficiently identified regions of scar and normal myocardium. Regions with bipolar electrogram amplitudes between 0.5 and 1.5 mV were found to correlate to areas of “intermediate” fibrosis (21–79%) with only remnant strands of myocardial cells and were identified as target region for ablation. Cooled‐tip endocardial radiofrequency ablation lead to transmural coagulation necrosis up to a depth of 7.0 mm.