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Noninvasive electrocardiographic assessment of ventricular activation and remodeling response to cardiac resynchronization therapy

Authors :
Thomas Jackson, MBBS
Simon Claridge, PhD
Jonathan Behar, PhD
Cheng Yao, PhD
Mark Elliott, MBBS
Vishal Mehta, MBBS
Justin Gould, PhD
Baldeep Sidhu, MBBS
Helder Pereira, MSc
Steven Niederer, PhD
Gerald Carr-White, PhD
Christopher A. Rinaldi, MD, FHRS
Source :
Heart Rhythm O2, Vol 2, Iss 1, Pp 12-18 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Background: Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) produces acute changes in electric resynchronization that can be measured noninvasively with electrocardiographic body surface mapping (ECGi). The relation between baseline acute electrophysiology metrics and their manipulation with CRT and reverse remodeling is unclear. Objective: To test (ECGi) derived parameters of electrical activation as predictors of volumetric response to CRT. Methods: ECGi was performed in 21 patients directly following CRT implant. Activation parameters (left ventricular total activation time [LVtat], global biventricular total activation time [VVtat], global left/right ventricular electrical synchrony [VVsync], and global left ventricular dispersion of activation times [LVdisp]) were measured at baseline and following echocardiographically optimized CRT. Remodeling response (>15% reduction left ventricular end-systolic volume) was assessed 6 months post CRT. Results: Patients were aged 68.9 ± 12.1 years, 81% were male, and 57% were ischemic. Baseline measures of dyssynchrony were more pronounced in left bundle branch block (LBBB) vs non-LBBB. ECGi demonstrated a trend of greater interventricular dyssynchrony between responders and nonresponders that did not reach statistical significance (VVsync: -45.7 ± 22.4 ms vs -25.1 ± 29.3 ms, P = .227). Remaining activation parameters were similar between responders and nonresponders (VVtat 101 ± 22.0 ms vs 98.9 ± 23.4 ms, P = .838; LVtat 86.4 ± 17.1 ms vs 85.1 ± 27.7 ms, P = .904; LVdisp 28.2 ± 6.3 ms vs 27.0 ± 8.7 ms, P = .726). In volumetric responders activation parameters were significantly improved with CRT compared to nonresponders: VV sync (-45.67 ± 22.41 ms vs 2.33±18.87 ms, P = .001), VVtat (101 ± 22.04 ms vs 71 ± 14.01 ms, P = .002), LVtat (86.44 ± 17.15 ms vs 67.67 ± 11.31 ms, P = .006), and LVdisp (28.22 ± 6.3 ms vs 21.56 ± 4.45 ms, P = .008). Conclusion: Baseline ECGi activation times did not predict CRT volumetric response. Volumetric responders exhibited significant improvements in ECGi-derived metrics with CRT. ECGi does not select CRT candidates but may be a useful adjunct to guide left ventricle lead implants and to perform postimplant CRT optimization.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26665018
Volume :
2
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Heart Rhythm O2
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b84897e7d6e04ab2bbe7ff49f0097af5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hroo.2021.01.004