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Rhythms That Go Bump in the Night

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Rhythms That Go Bump in the Night Teresa Menendez Hood, M.D. FLB s Creepy VF Eerie VT Scary AF Ghostly Torsade Sudden Cardiac Death Death within one hour of onset ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rhythms That Go Bump in the Night


1
Rhythms That Go Bump in the Night
  • Teresa Menendez Hood, M.D.

2
FLBs
  • Creepy VF
  • Eerie VT
  • Scary AF
  • Ghostly Torsade

3
Sudden Cardiac Death
  • Death within one hour of onset with an abrupt
    change in clinical status
  • In the field VF is present 40, EMD 20 and
    Asystole 40
  • Order of survival 25, 6, 1
  • Monomorphic VT is actually not that common
  • This represents 50 of ALL cardiac deaths
    (300,000/year)
  • It is the initial manifestation of CAD in ½ of
    all SCD victims.
  • 20 will have no structural heart disease.

4
  • CAD accounts for 80 of all SCD in Western
    societies
  • Only 20 are due to an acute MI
  • Risk Factors coronary artery disease and its
    risk factors, LVH, certain cardiomyopathies and
    genetic diseases
  • Transient risk factors include ischemia,
    systemic abnormalities, autonomic factors and
    proarrythmic factors
  • At EPS54 will have inducible VT and 30 will
    have inducible PMVT

5
Creepy VF
  • Inventor of the external defibrillator!
  • Paul Zoll, M.D.

6
Original article NEJM
1960
Ventricular Fibrillation Treatment and
Prevention by External Electric Currents
Ventricular fibrillation, usually a rapidly fatal
arrhythmia, occurs most commonly in
coronary-artery disease, in patients with
atrioventricular block and in toxic reactions to
digitalis, quinidine and procaine amide.
Occasionally, it succeeds ventricular
tachycardia. This paper presents additional
experiences confirming the clinical value of
external countershock in terminating ventricular
tachycardia and fibrillation and of external
electric stimulation in preventing these
arrhythmias. Alternating current (60 cycle, 0.15
second, 150 to 450 volts) was applied to the
unopened chest with large electrodes. A cardiac
pacemaker providing monophasic rounded impulses
of 2 milliseconds duration over wide ranges of
rate and amplitude was used to stimulate the
heart externally. Ventricular tachycardia and
fibrillation were terminated by externally
applied electric countershock more than five
hundred and thirty-two times in 8 patients 5
have survived for one month to two and a half
years. The technique is immediately effective,
clinically feasible and safe. Prevention of
recurrent ventricular tachycardia and
fibrillation in patients with complete heart
block remains an unsolved problem. Drugs are
largely ineffective external electric cardiac
stimulation at rates above the basic
idioventricular rate has been effective in
preventing these recurrent ventricular
arrhythmias, but long-term stimulation is
difficult.Zoll PM, Linenthal AJ, Normal Zarsky
LR. Ventricular Fibrillation Treatment and
Prevention by External Electric Currents. New Eng
J Med 1960 262105-112.
7
VF
  • The primary arrhythmia responsible for SCD
  • Acute treatment is with external defibrillation

8
VT or SVT with Aberrancy?
9
VF (or the EKG of JELLO)
10
Ben Franklin would say electricity is a good
thing!
11
ICD shock
12
Eerie VT in patients with CAD
  • Usually seen in patients with a prior
    MIextensive, healed, at least 2 weeks old
  • May result in syncope or SCD
  • Poor predictors previous large MI that involves
    the septum and with low EF if the MI involved
    CHF/hypotension or VF that is also not good if
    you are left with an LV aneurysm or a wide
    QRS(gt120ms) in NORMAL SINUS RHYTHM.

13
VT with CAD
14
VT with CAD
15
Wide complex tachycardia
  • If the patient has structural heart disease, then
    it is VT
  • It does not matter what the BP is in your
    decision making
  • Things that favor VT
  • positive or negative concordance, visible AV
    dissociation, NW axis, absence of an RS complex
    in all the precordial leads(v1-v6), RS interval
    gt100ms in any precordial lead
  • Things that favor SVT with aberrancy
  • Looks like a classic LBBB/RBBB (know what this is
    in V1 and lead 1), has the same QRS as in NSR

16
LBBB
17
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18
SVT with Aberrancy
19
VT or SVT?
20
VT or SVT?
21
Always err on side that is is VT because
  • 1. VT is more common than SVT with aberrancy
  • 2. In patients with structural heart disease,
    particularly prior infarction, VT is much, much
    more common than SVT with aberrancy
  • 3. If SVT is misdiagnosed as VT for the purposes
    of acute treatment, no harm will come to the
    patient
  • 4. If VT is misdiagnosed as SVT for the purposes
    of acute treatment, a cardiac arrest can be
    precipitated

22
VT with CAD
  • Mechanism is reentry which means that is can be
    induced by EP study using PES and can be
    entrained and reset
  • Do not worry, only EPs understand this
  • Among patients with spontaneous VT and CAD , 95
    will have it induced in the lab
  • 22 will need 2 sites used for induction of VT
    (RVA and RVOT)

23
VT with CAD
  • The key feature that predicts how well tolerated
    it will be is the rate and thus dictates the
    initial strategy
  • If not well tolerated? SYNCH CVN
  • Little data that Lidocaine does anything..may be
    helpful if patient is having an MI
  • IV amiodarone is the drug of choice for acute
    stable VT or VT recurrences
  • Long term treatment should be an ICD with or
    without AAD therapy(amiodarone or Class III drugs)

24
VT with Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy
  • IDCCan have multiple etiologies and 1/3 are
    familial
  • Arrhythmogenesis may be due to extensive
    subendocardial scarring and patchy fibrosis which
    can lead to areas of reentry
  • Other triggers may be microvascular
    ischemia,electrolyte abnormalities, geometric
    alterations and changes in catecholamines.

25
VT with IDCM
  • Bundle Branch Reentry VT-this is a VT that occurs
    in up to 30 of patients and is a reentrant
    circuit in the His Purkinje system.This VT tends
    to be fast (300 beats per minute) and result in
    syncope and degenerate to VF. This VT is treated
    with ablation on the RBB and not an ICD!

26
IDCM
  • These patients tend to have EMD or
    Bradyarrythmias along with VT/VF as a mode of SCD
    (especially in those with Functional Class 4 CHF)
  • Syncope should be taken seriously and is an
    indication for ICD
  • EP studies are not as predictive as in patients
    with CAD
  • Amiodarone appears to be more helpful than in
    patients with CAD

27
VT with Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia
  • 17 cause of SCD in the young in the US
  • Familial in 30
  • More common in men and with exercise
  • VTs usually come from the RV
  • Fibrous tissue and fat in the RV (the epicardial
    layer) and replaces normal myocardial cells
  • EKG usually may show an epsilon wave in the RV
    leads or t wave inversion and see ST elevation
    on stress testing of the RV leads
  • Positive signal average EKG
  • Treatment is ICD /- Ablation

28
EPSILON WAVE-can you see it?
29
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30
VT in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
  • HCM is when there is hypertrophy in the absence
    of a cardiac or systemic cause
  • Due to genetic mutations in the cardiac sarcomere
    proteins and autosomal dominant in 45
  • Can get AFIB which is not tolerated well
  • VT/VF is often preceded by AFB or ST
  • Those who are young and male have the worst
    prognosis
  • They tend to also have microvascular ischemia,
    autonomic dysfunction and abnormal response to
    exercise

31
VT with HCM
  • 40 of the SCD occurs during or after exercise
  • They also have enhanced AV nodal conduction which
    makes their atrial fibrillation conduct faster
    and 5 have an accessory pathway
  • Those at highest risk are those with positive FH
    of SCD, NSVT, Syncope, Inducible VT/VF at EP
    study, and abnormal BP to exercise.

32
EKG in HCM
  •     It varies from normal to significantly
    abnormal.    Left ventricular hypertrophy is
    common.     Often has left anterior hemiblock.
        Q waves in anterolateral leads which can
    simulate recent myocardial infarction is not
    unusual.     Many times deep Q in II, III , AVF
    with ST segment elevation can be seen.

33
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34
Other causes of scd
  • Valvular
  • Congenital Heart Disease
  • MVP
  • Neurological Disease- cerebral T waves
  • Congenital Long QT
  • Myocarditis
  • WPW, Brugada, Short QT
  • Coronary anomalies-anomalous artery passes
    between the aorta and the pulmonary trunk
  • A congenital heart defect caused the death of an
    Everman High School football player who collapsed
    Thursday morning on the school track, according
    to preliminary findings released Friday by the
    Tarrant County medical examiners office. DMN
    10/17/03

35
Intracerebral Hemorrhage
36
Short QT Syndrome A Familial Cause of Sudden
Death
The short QT syndrome is characterized by
familial sudden death, short refractory periods,
and inducible ventricular fibrillation. It is
important to recognize this ECG pattern because
it is related to a high risk of sudden death in
young, otherwise healthy subjects.
37
Normal Heart VTIdiopathic
  • Yesit does exist
  • RVOT VT-catecholamine sensitive
  • LVOT VT-catecholamine sensitive
  • Fascicular VT-from left anterior or posterior
    fascicle-Belhassen's VT. Due to microreentry and
    adenosine sensitive and can respond to verapamil.
  • These are treated with ablation and NOT AN ICD!

38
RVOT VT
39
Long QT
40
Long QT
Mutations in potassium-channel genes KCNQ1 (LQT1
locus) and KCNH2 (LQT2 locus) and the
sodium-channel gene SCN5A (LQT3 locus) are the
most common causes of the congenital long-QT
syndrome
41
WPW
42
WPW
43
WPW with AFIB
44
Brugada
45
Brugada
46
Polymorphic VT
  • Need to look at the QT interval and decide
    whether it is long or normal
  • If it is long? Is it due to acquired or
    congenital long QT?
  • If it is normal, then must rule out ischemia and
    once you have done that, consider Brugada
    syndrome or Short QT syndrome

47
Drug induced Long QT
48
TdP
49
Treatment would beremove the culprit drug,
temporary pace at 100 and give magnesium!
50
The End
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