Localisation of the origin of a ventricular tachycardia

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Areas of the left ventricle where VT's can originate from: The left ventricle is depicted as having been opened. Regions are defined as: AA = antero-apical; AB = antero-basal; AM = mid-anterior; SA = apical septum; SB = basal-septum; SM = mid-septum; PA = posterior apex; PB = postero-basal; PM = mid-posterior.. Adapted from Miller et al.[1]

The localisation of the origin (or exit site) of a ventricular tachycardia can be helpful in understanding the cause of the VT and is very helpful when planning an ablation procedure to treat a ventricular tachycardia.

Using this approach and the algorithms below [2] the exit site can be estimated with reasonable accuracy (PPV around 70%). In these algorhythms, bundle branch block was defined as “left” or “right” based on QRS morphology in lead V1; right bundle branch block (RBBB) pattern was defined by a mono-, bi-, or triphasic R wave or qR in V1; LBBB pattern was defined by a QS, rS, or qrS in V1.

Localising the VT exit in LBBB VT with negative QRS complexes inferior
Localising the VT exit in LBBB VT with positive QRS complexes inferior
Localising the VT exit in RBBB VT with positive QRS complexes inferior
Localising the VT exit in RBBB VT with negative QRS complexes inferior

References

Error fetching PMID 17338765:
Error fetching PMID 3349580:
  1. Error fetching PMID 3349580: [Miller]
  2. Error fetching PMID 17338765: [segal]

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