29
“Not so wide” QRS tachycardia: Isn’t it a VT? Mid Term ISECON, Thane, Nov 2017 Satish Toal Director Cardiac Electrophysiology, New Brunswick Heart Centre, Asst Prof., Dept of Medicine, Dalhousie University

“Not so wide” QRS tachycardia: Isn’t it a VT?iseindia.org/ecg_presentation/04.Dr.Satish Toal.pdf · 2020. 9. 10. · ARE THE QRS NARROW OR WIDE •Cannot tell conclusively from

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    4

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • “Not so wide” QRS tachycardia: Isn’t it a VT?

    Mid Term ISECON, Thane, Nov 2017

    Satish Toal

    Director Cardiac Electrophysiology, New Brunswick Heart Centre,

    Asst Prof., Dept of Medicine, Dalhousie University

  • Disclosures

    •No conflict of interest

  • Objectives:

    • Identify narrow and “not so wide” QRS tachycardia that can be VT • Identify features on ECG that help diagnose them •Understand acute and long term management of fascicular VT

  • ARE THE QRS NARROW OR WIDE

    •Cannot tell conclusively from a single monitor strip

    •Get a 12 lead ECG, if clinically possible

    •QRSd < 120 ms is narrow, < 145 ms relatively narrow

    •Common things common - narrow complex rhythms are more likely to be supraventricular and wide complex ventricular

  • •Remember arrhythmias can break rules - exceptions to both can happen

    •Acute treatment – usually don’t have to break our rules !

    •Than why bother?

    • Important for long term management and prognosis

  • • Idiopathic Fascicular VT

    •VT post MI using His Purkinjee system or propagating into it very early

    •Children (with a narrower baseline QRS in sinus rhythm)

    •Digoxin toxicity - mechanism is enhanced automaticity in the region of the fascicles

    Narrow Complex tachycardias that can be VT are unusual

  • History

    •34 year male

    •H/o palpitations, previous ER visits

    •Not feeling well for few days

    •No h/o structural heart disease

    •Normal echo

  • After beta blockers in previous admission

  • Most common idiopathic VT of the left ventricle.

    It is a re-entrant tachycardia, typically seen in young patients without structural heart disease.

    Only 10% of cases of VT occur in the absence of structural heart disease, termed idiopathic VT. The majority of idiopathic VTs (75-90%) arise from the right ventricle — e.g right ventricular outflow tract tachycardia.

    Fascicular VT is the most common type of idiopathic VT arising from the left ventricle (10-15% of all idiopathic VTs).

    Usually occurs in young healthy patients (15-40 years of age; 60-80% male). Most episodes occur at rest but may be triggered by exercise, stress and beta agonists. The mechanism is re-entrant tachycardia due to an ectopic focus within the left ventricle.

    A similar ECG pattern of fascicular VT may occur with digoxin toxicity, but here the mechanism is enhanced automaticity in the region of the fascicles.

    Fascicular VT

  • Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia eg. fusion complexes, AV dissociation, capture beats.

    QRS duration 100 – 140 ms — this is narrower than other forms of VT.

    Short RS interval (onset of R to nadir of S wave) of 60-80 ms — the RS interval is usually > 100 ms in other types of VT.

    RBBB Pattern.

    Axis deviation depending on anatomical site of re-entry circuit (see classification). ◦ Posterior fascicular VT (90-95% of cases): RBBB morphology + left axis deviation; arises close

    to the left posterior fascicle. ◦ Anterior fascicular VT (5-10% of cases): RBBB morphology + right axis deviation; arises close to

    the left anterior fascicle. ◦ Upper septal fascicular VT (rare): atypical morphology – usually RBBB but may resemble LBBB

    instead; cases with narrow QRS and normal axis have also been reported. Arises from the region of the upper septum

    Fascicular VT

  • After ablation – pt comes back

  • Comes back again after “successful” ablation !

  • Figure 2

    HeartRhythm Case Reports 2016 2, 101-106DOI: (10.1016/j.hrcr.2015.11.011)

    Copyright © 2016 Heart Rhythm Society Terms and Conditions

    http://www.elsevier.com/termsandconditionshttp://www.elsevier.com/termsandconditionshttp://www.elsevier.com/termsandconditions

  • • Diagnosis can be difficult and this rhythm is often misdiagnosed as SVT with RBBB;

    • Use criteria other than QRS duration for diagnosis: • Characteristic pattern of QRS morphology

    • Capture beats,

    • Fusion beats,

    • VA dissociation – remember there may be exceptions

    • Never forget the clinical setting – • History

    • Age,

    • Structural heart disease

    • Medications

    Diagnosis – fascicular VT

  • • Often unresponsive to adensoine, vagal maneouvers, and lidnocaine.

    • However, it characteristically responds to verapamil.

    • Digoxin-induced fascicular VT is responsive to Digoxin Immune Fab.

    Management – fascicular VT Arrhythmia may break rules, do you?

  • Recent AWMI, tachycardia 190 bpm, QRSd 110 ms

    Miller JM. The many manifestation of ventricular tachycardia. J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol. 1992;3:88-107.

  • Miller JM. The many manifestation of ventricular tachycardia. J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol. 1992;3:88-107.

  • RBBB, Left axis, QRSd 135 ms

    Bogun F, Good E, Reich S, et al. Role of Purkinje fibers in post-infarction ventricular tachycardia. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006;48:2500–2507

  • Narrow QRS VT post MI

    • Abello et al - incidence of SMVT with a QRS complex

  • • Purkinje fibers may participate in the re-entry circuit of post-infarction VT.

    • Involvement of the Purkinje system accounts for the relatively narrow QRS complexes (≤145 ms) during these VTs. Usually have RBBB morphology

    • VT with left bundle branch block morphology, the effective target site was near the His bundle - suggesting that a proximal portion of the His-Purkinje system, before the branch point of the right and left bundle branches, was involved.

    Bogun F, Good E, Reich S, et al. Role of Purkinje fibers in post-infarction ventricular tachycardia. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006;48:2500–2507

  • Bogun F, Good E, Reich S, et al. Role of Purkinje fibers in post-infarction ventricular tachycardia. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006;48:2500–2507

  • • 61 year male, HTN, DM

    • No previous heart disease

    • Normal coronaries

    • Mild global LV dysfunction

  • • Hemodynamically stable

    • IV adenosine – no effect

    • Spontaneous termination but repeated runs

    • Given metoprolol, Verapamil – no effect

    • Responded to fleicanide !

  • Al’Aref et al Differentiation of Left Ventricular Arrhythmias Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol.2015;8:616-624. DOI: 10.1161/CIRCEP.114.002619

  • Take home message • Narrow complex VT can happen, but are uncommon, hence rule out SVT • Don’t just focus on QRS width • Analyze ECG completely - morphology, axis, VA association, capture/fusion

    beats • Correlate ECG with clinical scenario • If pt has h/o MI

    • Look for capture, fusion beats, VA dissociation

    • If young healthy pt • Look for characteristic RBBB left axis deviation in addition to capture, fusion beats and

    VA dissociation

    • Treatment: • Fascicular VT responds to Verapamil. • Post MI pts always consider possibility of VT with sustained monomorphic tachycardia

    in relatively narrow QRS • Digoxin-induced fascicular VT is responsive to Digoxin Immune Fab.