Diagnostics | 2021

Integrating Electrocardiography and Vectorcardiography in the Differential Diagnosis of Wide Complex Tachycardia in a Patient with Left Ventricular Noncompaction: A Case Report and Brief Literature Review

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


A 69-year-old woman with a history of hypertension and obesity, hospitalized with atypical chest pain, was diagnosed with left ventricular noncompaction. In-hospital monitoring of the cardiac rhythm revealed multiple episodes of atrial tachycardia and one episode of wide complex tachycardia (WCT) with left bundle branch block-like morphology and a right superior QRS axis. The electrocardiographic criteria were suggestive of a supraventricular origin of the WCT. Given the importance of reaching the correct diagnosis when dealing with a WCT, we tried to further define the pattern of ventricular activation using vectorcardiography (VCG). We analyzed the QRS loops during WCT in comparison to a sinus beat, a narrow complex tachycardia beat, and a premature ventricular contraction. The fast initial activation seen in the efferent limb of the QRS loop during the WCT was thought to be reflective of the fast initial activation via the conduction system seen in SVT with aberrancy, which was our final diagnosis for the WCT episode. This case illustrates a novel use of vectorcardiography as an additional diagnostic tool in the differential diagnosis of WCT.

Volume 11
Pages None
DOI 10.3390/diagnostics11071152
Language English
Journal Diagnostics

Full Text