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. 1992 Sep;15(9):1357-61.

Surgical treatment of ventricular tachycardia with Nd:YAG laser photocoagulation

Affiliations
  • PMID: 1383997

Surgical treatment of ventricular tachycardia with Nd:YAG laser photocoagulation

J G Selle et al. Pacing Clin Electrophysiol. 1992 Sep.

Abstract

Background: Directed surgery for the definitive treatment of drug resistant ventricular tachycardia (VT) due to coronary artery disease carries a significant operative mortality. Surgical failure to cure VT remains a problem, especially in patients without anterior left ventricular myocardial infarcts and aneurysms. A method has been developed in which Nd:YAG laser is used to photocoagulate myocardium responsible for the initiation of VT using a "sequential" approach intended to improve operative results and gain insight into the variable substrates causing VT.

Methods: Under normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass, VT is induced and then extensive endocardial and epicardial mapping performed to localize and characterize that form of VT. Nd:YAG is applied to the areas of myocardium from which that form of VT originates until it disappears and is no longer inducible. Next attempts are made to induce other forms of VT and when successful, mapping and lasing repeated until finally VT is no longer inducible.

Results: Fifty-one patients were operated on and have been followed for at least 1 year. Operative mortality in 12 patients with preoperative ejection fractions less than 20% was 41%; in 39 patients with ejection fractions greater than 20% operative mortality was 8%. Eighty-eight percent of the 43 operative survivors are free of recurrent sustained VT at 1 year. There have been no arrhythmic mortalities. In a group of 30 patients evaluated for epicardial VT, 9 of 14 patients with inferior infarcts without left ventricular aneurysms had at least one form of epicardial VT.

Conclusions: Nd:YAG laser photocoagulation of myocardial VT using a sequential approach is a viable method that permits an ongoing study of this entity. Operative mortality remains high in patients with diffusely poor left ventricular function. Epicardial VT is frequent in patients with inferior infarcts and may account for inferior results in these patients when conventional endocardial approaches are used alone.

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