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Dive into the research topics where Franck Molin is active.

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Featured researches published by Franck Molin.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2012

Usefulness of fluorine-18 positron emission tomography/computed tomography for identification of cardiovascular implantable electronic device infections.

J. Sarrazin; François Philippon; Michel Tessier; Jean Guimond; Franck Molin; Jean Champagne; Isabelle Nault; L. Blier; Maxime Nadeau; Lyne Charbonneau; Mikaël Trottier; G. O'Hara

OBJECTIVES This study evaluated the usefulness of fluorodesoxyglucose marked by fluorine-18 ((18)F-FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT) in patients with suspected cardiovascular implantable electronic device (CIED) infection. BACKGROUND CIED infection is sometimes challenging to diagnose. Because extraction is associated with significant morbidity/mortality, new imaging modalities to confirm the infection and its dissemination would be of clinical value. METHODS Three groups were compared. In Group A, 42 patients with suspected CIED infection underwent (18)F-FDG PET/CT. Positive PET/CT was defined as abnormal uptake along cardiac devices. Group B included 12 patients without infection who underwent PET/CT 4 to 8 weeks post-implant. Group C included 12 patients implanted for >6 months without infection who underwent PET/CT for another indication. Semi-quantitative ratio (SQR) was obtained from the ratio between maximal uptake and lung parenchyma uptake. RESULTS In Group A, 32 of 42 patients with suspected CIED infection had positive PET/CT. Twenty-four patients with positive PET/CT underwent extraction with excellent correlation. In 7 patients with positive PET/CT, 6 were treated as superficial infection with clinical resolution. One patient with positive PET/CT but negative leukocyte scan was considered false positive due to Dacron pouch. Ten patients with negative-PET/CT were treated with antibiotics and none has relapsed at 12.9 ± 1.9 months. In Group B, patients had mild uptake seen at the level of the connector. There was no abnormal uptake in Group C patients. Median SQR was significantly higher in Group A (A = 2.02 vs. B = 1.08 vs. C = 0.57; p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS PET/CT is useful in differentiating between CIED infection and recent post-implant changes. It may guide appropriate therapy.


Circulation | 1993

Pace mapping using body surface potential maps to guide catheter ablation of accessory pathways in patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome.

Marc Dubuc; Réginald Nadeau; Gaetan Tremblay; Teresa Kus; Franck Molin; Pierre Savard

BackgroundA pace mapping technique using body surface potential maps (BSPMs) was developed to guide the positioning of an ablation catheter at the ventricular insertion point of accessory pathways (AP) in patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (WPW). Methods and ResultsThe study was performed on 30 WPW patients. BSPMs were recorded with 63 leads distributed over the entire torso surface. The catheter used for radiofrequency ablation was first placed in the vicinity of the ventricular preexcitation site predicted by BSPMs recorded during the Δ wave. BSPMs were then recorded during pacing with this catheter, the comparison between the preexcited and paced BSPMs indicated whether the pacing site was too anterior or posterior with respect to the preexcitation site, and the catheter was moved accordingly. This process was repeated until the preexcited and paced BSPMs were highly correlated (r≥0.8), and ablation then was attempted. It was possible to successfully ablate the AP in 28 patients after an investigation that lasted 54±44 minutes between the recording of the first paced BSPM and that of the BSPM paced at the successful ablation site. Patients with left free wall pathways needed less investigation time compared with patients with pathways of other locations (46±9 versus 100±25 minutes, p=0.031). The sensitivity of BSPM pace mapping was assessed using pacing with a multipolar catheter, and significant changes were observed on the BSPMs for beats with pacing sites that were only 5 mm apart. ConclusionsBSPM pace mapping allowed us to achieve a 93% success rate with short investigation durations, provides significant information that cannot be obtained with the standard 12-lead ECG, is a self-correcting procedure that reduces the importance of BSPM alterations due to individual differences in the shape of the torso or heart, and is applicable only to patients with AP showing antegrade conduction.


Journal of Electrocardiology | 1993

A computer heart model incorporating anisotropic propagation. III. Simulation of ectopic beats.

Zhenyao Xu; Ramesh M. Gulrajani; Franck Molin; Michel Lorange; Bruno Dubé; Pierre Savard; Réginald Nadeau

With the advent of catheter ablation procedures, it has become an important goal to predict noninvasively the site of origin of ventricular tachycardia. Site classifications based on the observed body surface potential maps (BSPMs) during ventricular endocardial pacing, as well as on the patterns of the QRS integrals of these maps, have been suggested. The goals of this study were to verify these maps and their QRS integral patterns via simulation using a computer heart model with realistic geometry and to determine whether the model could improve clinical understanding of these ectopic patterns. Simulation was achieved by initiating excitation of the heart model at different endocardial sites and their overlying epicardial counterparts. This excitation propagated in anisotropic fashion in the myocardium. Retrograde excitation of the models His-Purkinje conduction system was necessary to obtain realistic activation durations. Simulated BSPMs, computed by placing the heart model inside a numerical torso model, and their QRS integrals were close to those observed clinically. Small differences in QRS integral map patterns and in the positions of the QRS integral map extrema were noted for endocardial sites in the left septal and anteroseptal regions. The simulated BSPMs during early QRS for an endocardial site and its epicardial counterpart tended to be mirror images about the zero isopotential contour, exchanging positive and negative map regions. The simulation results attest to the models ability to reproduce accurately clinically recorded body surface potential distributions obtained following endocardial stimulation. The QRS integral maps from endocardial sites in the left septal and anteroseptal regions were the most labile, owing to considerable cancellation effects. Conventional BSPMs can be useful to help distinguish between endocardial and epicardial ectopic sites.


Canadian Journal of Cardiology | 2007

Catheter ablation for cardiac arrhythmias: A 14-year experience with 5330 consecutive patients at the Quebec Heart Institute, Laval Hospital

Gilles O’Hara; François Philippon; Jean Champagne; L. Blier; Franck Molin; Jean-Marc Côté; Isabelle Nault; J. Sarrazin; Marcel R. Gilbert

BACKGROUND Catheter ablation is a curative treatment with excellent success and minimal complication rates for patients with supraventricular or ventricular arrhythmias. METHODS The acute outcomes and complications of all catheter ablation procedures for supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias performed at the Quebec Heart Institute (Sainte-Foy, Quebec) during a 14-year period from January 1, 1993, to December 31, 2006, were prospectively assessed. The ablation procedures were classified according to the arrhythmias induced using standard electrophysiological techniques and definitions. Immediate success and complication rates were prospectively included in the database. RESULTS A total of 5330 patients had catheter ablation performed at the Institute during the period assessed. The mean (+/- SD) age of patients was 50 +/- 18 years (range four to 97 years), and 2340 patients (44%) were men. Most of the patients were younger than 75 years (group 1), and 487 (9%) were 75 years of age and older (group 2). Indications for ablations were as follows: atrioventricular nodal re-entry tachycardia (AVNRT) in 2263 patients, accessory pathways in 1147 patients, atrioventricular node ablation in 803 patients, typical atrial flutter in 377 patients and atrial tachycardia in 160 patients; 580 patients had other ablation procedures. The overall success rates were 81% for atrial tachycardia, 92% for accessory pathways or flutter, and 99% for AVNRT or atrioventricular node ablation. There was no difference in the success rates of the younger (group 1) and older (group 2) patients. Seventy-seven patients (1.4%) had complications, including 11 major events (myocardial infarction in one patient, pulmonary embolism in three patients and permanent pacemaker in seven patients). In patients undergoing AVNRT ablation, two had a permanent pacemaker implanted immediately after the procedure and three had a permanent pacemaker implanted at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS The results confirm that radiofrequency ablation is safe and effective, supporting ablation therapy as a first-line therapy for the majority of patients with cardiac arrhythmias.


Circulation | 1995

Three Distinct Patterns of Ventricular Activation in Infarcted Human Hearts An Intraoperative Cardiac Mapping Study During Sinus Rhythm

Robert Hatala; Pierre Savard; Gaétan Tremblay; Pierre Pagé; René Cardinal; Franck Molin; Teresa Kus; Réginald Nadeau

BACKGROUND Comprehensive data based on single-beat analysis of the ventricular activation sequence during sinus rhythm in infarcted hearts are currently not available. It was the aim of our study (1) to measure and analyze these activation sequences on the epicardial surface of the right and left ventricles and on the left ventricular endocardial surface, and (2) to correlate specific activation patterns with the surface ECG. METHODS AND RESULTS Isochronal maps were computed from 127 endocardial and epicardial unipolar electrograms recorded simultaneously during sinus rhythm in 45 post-myocardial infarction patients operated on for recurrent ventricular tachycardia (age, 57 +/- 10 years [mean +/- SD], left ventricular ejection fraction, 29 +/- 9%). Patients with bundle-branch block, but not with intraventricular conduction defects, were excluded. Data such as the timing of initial and terminal activation, the number of breakthroughs, the total activation time, and the number of ventricular segments without activation were measured and analyzed according to location of the myocardial infarction. The global epicardial activation was characterized in all patients by a widespread initial breakthrough on the anterior right ventricle (16 +/- 8 milliseconds after QRS onset), which was followed by one or two other breakthroughs in 65% of patients. Subsequently, three characteristic epicardial patterns of the activation spread were found: (1) radial, from the right to the left ventricle, found in all patients with inferoposterior myocardial infarction; (2) counterclockwise rotation, in which posteroseptal crossing preceded the anteroseptal crossing, found in 38% of patients with anterior myocardial infarction; and (3) pincerlike encirclement, in which both septal crossings and/or breakthroughs occurred nearly simultaneously and merged at the left ventricular free wall (typical for apical involvement in anterior and combined myocardial infarction). The simultaneous presence of multiple major activation wave fronts typically found in patients with the pincerlike activation pattern was reflected on the surface ECG by multiphasic, notched QRS complexes. Activation delay was observed in 89% of patients, and terminal activation was topographically related to myocardial infarction in 94% of patients. Delayed activation exceeding the surface QRS was observed in 11% and 31% of cases on the endocardium and epicardium, respectively. CONCLUSIONS These results offer a solid basis for a more precise interpretation of a wide range of electrophysiological data and provide a framework for future investigations of surface ECG reflections of endocardial and epicardial activation patterns recorded in patients with chronic myocardial infarction.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1997

UNDERDETECTION OF VENTRICULAR TACHYCARDIA USING A 40 MS STABILITY CRITERION : EFFECT OF ANTIARRHYTHMIC THERAPY

Pierre Le Franc; Teresa Kuś; Alain Vinet; Pierre Rocque; Franck Molin; Paolo Costi

Inappropriate shocks can complicate cardioverter defibrillator therapy. Among solutions proposed to avoid oversensing are algorithms to reduce inappropriate detection of atrial fibrillation (AF) or sinus tachycardia. In patients not on antiarrythmic drugs, an interval stability criterion of 40 ms has been validated with the Medtronic PCD to discriminate ventricular tachycardia (VT) from AF. With this algorithm, VT is considered stable if no interval varies from one of the three preceding in tervals by more than 40 ms. If an interval does not fulfill this criterion, the VT event counter is reset to zero. The aim of this study was to investigate the incidence of underdetection when this criterion is ap plied in patients treated with antiarrhythmic drugs. We studied 132 sustained monomorphic VTs induced in 42 patients during 101 electrophysiological studies (EPS). EPS were performed without treatment (group I. 24 patients, 44 VTs); on Class Ia drug (group II, 17 patients, 24 VTs); Class Ic drug (group III, 22 patients, 39 VTs); or sotalol (group IV, 17 patients, 25 VTs). The endocardial electrogram of all VT episodes was digitized and the stability algorithm was applied. The reset arrhythmias were distributed among no delay, small, moderate (<10 s) and important (>15 s) delay in VT detection. The relation be tween drug use and reset was analyzed. Beset was found in 86 (65%) of induced VTs. No difference in heart rate or induction mode was shown between reset and nonreset VTs. There was a significative asso ciation between drag use and reset probability (Chi2 significantly different, P < 0.05). In patients treated with Class Ic drugs, the probability of finding an important delay in VT detection was 12.5% versus 0% in nontreated patients or in patients treated with sotalol. We conclude that a stability criterion of 40 ms is probably safe in nontreated patients but should be used with caution in patients treated with antiarrhythmics, especially in the presence of Class Ic drags.


Circulation | 1995

Body Surface Potential Distributions During Idiopathic Ventricular Tachycardia

Didier Klug; Ange Ferracci; Franck Molin; Marc Dubuc; Pierre Savard; Teresa Kus; François Hélie; René Cardinal; Réginald Nadeau

BACKGROUND The purpose of this report is to describe the body surface potential maps (BSPMs) during idiopathic ventricular tachycardia (VT) and to determine what differences exist between different idiopathic VT morphologies. METHODS AND RESULTS We performed BSPMs during VT on 12 consecutive patients (3 women and 9 men; mean age, 42 +/- 13 years) presenting symptomatic idiopathic VT referred to our institution for electrophysiological study. Basal ECG, chest radiograph, and echocardiogram were normal in all patients. Clinical tachycardia showed left bundle branch block pattern (LBBB) in 9 patients, with sustained VT in 5 and nonsustained VT in 4, and right bundle branch block pattern (RBBB) in 3 with sustained VT. We found a unique pattern of BSPMs in each of the 9 patients during idiopathic LBBB VT configuration, whether sustained or nonsustained VT. This pattern appeared at the onset of the QRS and remained stable during the whole QRS complex. The area of minimal potential located in the upper anterior part of the torso was compatible with an origin of VT in the right ventricular outflow tract, as confirmed in 5 patients by successful radiofrequency ablation. We found an evolving pattern with two phases in each of the three RBBB VTs. The electrical axis during the initial part of the QRS could correspond to an endocardial-epicardial vector. The second phase, with a high voltage and area of minimal potential located in the inferior and anterior part of the torso, was compatible with a left ventricular apical origin that was confirmed by epicardial and endocardial mapping during cryosurgery in 1 patient. For all the VTs, the QRS isoarea maps showed the same pattern as the second phase of the QRS. CONCLUSIONS Two different BSPM patterns were found. All LBBB VTs had the same stable pattern corresponding to an infundibular origin. All RBBB VTs had an evolving pattern that stabilized in the second part of the QRS complex corresponding to an apical origin.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2001

Circadian variation of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation

Anne M. Gillis; Stuart J. Connolly; Marc Dubuc; Raymond Yee; Pierre Lacomb; François Philippon; Charles R. Kerr; Shane Kimber; Martin Gardner; Anthony S.L. Tang; Franck Molin; David Newman; Hoshiar Abdollah

The circadian variation of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) was studied in 67 patients who received a dual-chamber pacemaker 3 months before a planned atrioventricular node ablation. A distinct circadian variation of AF was observed with 2 time peaks in initiation (1 in the early morning and 1 in the early evening hours), which was modulated by atrial pacing, the duration of AF, and the use of beta-adrenergic blocking agents.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1992

Signal-averaged electrocardiography and detection of heart transplant rejection: Comparison of time and frequency domain analyses

Dominique Lacroix; Salem Kacet; Pierre Savard; Franck Molin; Jean Dagano; Annie Pol; Jean Lekieffre

To evaluate the role of the signal-averaged electrocardiogram (ECG) in the detection of heart transplant rejection, findings on 277 ECGs were compared with those in 218 endomyocardial biopsy specimens in 25 patients followed up for a median duration of 5.2 months (range 7 days to 17.5 months). Signal-averaged ECGs obtained at intervals of 16.4 +/- 22.3 days were analyzed in the time domain before and after high pass filtering at 25 and 70 Hz. Frequency domain analysis was performed with use of a fast Fourier transform algorithm. Sixteen severe rejection episodes requiring treatment were observed. These episodes induced significant decreases in peak and root-mean-square voltages of both filtered and unfiltered QRS complexes, as well as in the total spectral area. Conversely, QRS duration and 50- to 250-Hz or 70- to 110-Hz spectral areas were not significantly altered. In 14 cases mild rejection episodes were observed that did not significantly alter any of the variables studied. The root-mean-square voltage of the 70-Hz high pass filtered QRS complex was found to be the most accurate variable in detecting rejection. Moreover, this variable was also the most reproducible in 10 healthy control subjects. The optimal rejection criterion was defined as an 11% decrease in voltage between two consecutive recordings. It provided 87.5% sensitivity with 78.4% specificity. In conclusion, the signal-averaged ECG is helpful in the management of heart transplant rejection. Frequency domain analysis of the QRS complex does not increase the accuracy of the technique compared with the time domain approach.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1991

Bipolar atrial triggered pacing to restore normal chronotropic responsiveness in an orthotopic cardiac transplant patient.

Salem Kacet; Franck Molin; Dominique Lacroix; Alain Prat; Annie Pol; Henri Warembourg; Jean Lekieffre

A not uncommon arrythmia in cardiac orthotopic transplantation patients is sinus node dysfunction with chronotropic incompetence. This is a result of the surgical procedure that denervates the donor heart while the native sinus node may be normal but isolated in the remnant of the recipient atrial wall that serves as the anastomotic site. We were able to restore “normal sinus node function” in a heart transplant patient utilizing a bipolar single chamber pacemaker programmed to the triggered mode. A single unipolar active fixation lead was positioned in each atria. Both leads were connected to a bipolar AAT pulse generator utilizing a Y adaptator. The native atrium with its innervated intact sinus node effectively drove the donor atrium and thus the heart.

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Pierre Savard

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Teresa Kus

Université de Montréal

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