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Featured researches published by Jean-François Leclercq.
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1983
Philippe Coumel; Patrick Friocourt; Jacques Mugica; Patrick Attuel; Jean-François Leclercq
Six patients (5 men, 1 woman) with a history ranging from 3–16 years of resistant vagal atrial arrhythmias were treated by atrial pacing at a rate of 90Jmin. These patients have been followed up for an average of 5.5 years (range 2–11 years) with favorable resutls. The arrhythmias were charactemed by daily or weekly attacks of rypical alrial flutter and atrial fibrillalion occurring mainly or exclusively at night, at rest, or in the digestive periods in otherwise normal hearts of middle‐aged palients (first attack between 25 and 54, mean 40). The arrhythmias werc resistant to quinidinc, and were usually aggravated by digitalis, beta‐blockers and verapamil. Amiodaroneisusually the only effective drug in this syndrome, but was not used before pacing in the 2 first cases, and was in effective in the other 4 cases. Electrophysiologic studies confirmed the absence of sick sinus syndrome, and the close relationship betwecn a relative bradycardia and the onset of the arrhythmia. Atrial pacing alone totally controiled the arrhythmia in 1 palient; amiodarone was used in conjunction with pacing in 3 palients. In 1 patient the improvement was clear but incomplete, and in 1 patient permanent alrial fibrillation occurred shortly afler pacemaker implantalion.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1984
Philippe Coumel; Jean-François Leclercq; Patrick Assayag
Seventy-one patients (mean age 53 years) were treated with oral propafenone, 900 mg/day, for a mean of 6.6 months. A large spectrum of arrhythmias was encountered, and particular attention was paid to their relation with the autonomic nervous system. Drug efficacy was graded from 1 (no effect) to 5 (complete control) according to the clinical result and Holter recording. This method permitted comparisons to be made between propafenone and 3 other antiarrhythmic agents: quinidine, beta-blockers and amiodarone. Among the 32 patients with supraventricular arrhythmias, 9 cases of vagally dependent atrial flutter and fibrillation were less sensitive to propafenone (mean effect 1.4) than to quinidine (mean effect 2.0) or amiodarone (mean effect 2.3). However, 8 cases of adrenergically dependent atrial tachycardia and fibrillation were more sensitive to propafenone (mean effect 4.1) than to beta blockers (3.0) or amiodarone (mean effect 3.5). In 12 cases of miscellaneous atrial arrhythmias the response to propafenone was intermediate. However, 3 patients with resistant junctional tachycardia were improved with propafenone. Among 42 ventricular arrhythmias, 5 patients with extrasystole who were responsive to quinidine (mean effect 3.8) were also improved with propafenone (mean effect 4.6). Propafenone (mean effect 4.1) was much more effective than quinidine (mean effect 2.4) in treating 8 cases of idiopathic benign ventricular tachycardia and even more successful in treating 13 cases of more severe arrhythmias in diseased hearts (propafenones mean effect 4.1, quinidines mean effect 1.9 and amiodarones mean effect 1.9). Propafenone was less effective (mean effect 3.3) than amiodarone (mean effect 4.0) in 4 cases of severe, adrenergically dependent idiopathic ventricular tachycardia (VT).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1986
Marc Zimmermann; Pierre Maison-Blanche; Bruno Cauchemez; Jean-François Leclercq; Philippe Coumel
Twenty-four hour ambulatory electrocardiographic tape recordings of 30 patients (16 men and 14 women, mean age 42 +/- 17 years) with repetitive monomorphic idiopathic ventricular tachycardia were analyzed using a new computerized system designed to study 15 RR cycles and mean heart rate of the 3 minutes preceding any defined event. The mean (+/- SD) number of events analyzed per patient in 24 hours was 610 +/- 483 for single premature ventricular complexes, 622 +/- 490 for couplets, 260 +/- 411 for runs of 3 complexes, 186 +/- 476 for runs of 4, 108 +/- 173 for runs of 5, 82 +/- 129 for runs of 6 to 10 and 83 +/- 116 for runs of more than 10 complexes. The heart rate was faster before runs of ventricular tachycardia than before isolated extrasystoles (p less than 0.01) and a positive linear correlation was observed between the mean preceding heart rate and the type of extrasystolic activity, the length of the runs increasing with increasing preceding heart rate (r = 0.98, p less than 0.001). A long RR interval just before the occurrence of runs was present in 77% of the cases (23 of 30) with or without an oscillatory pattern of RR intervals due to bigeminy or trigeminy, and the length of the runs correlated positively with the duration of this long preceding diastole (r = 0.90, p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2000
Jean-François Leclercq; Antonio De Sisti; Pierre Fiorello; Franck Halimi; Stephanie Manot; Patrick Attuel
Long‐term prevention of atrial fibrillation is not constantly realized by single‐sits right atrial pacing, and the beneficial role of multisite atrial pacing is still being studied. Accordingly, we compared the effectiveness of dual site and single site atrial pacing in 83 patients (50 men, 33 women, aged 69 ± 10 years), who received a DDD device for primary sinus node dysfunction or bradycardia with documented atrial fibrillation. Inclusion criteria for dual site pacing were a sinus P wave ≥ 120 ms and at least two episodes of documented paroxysmal AF in the 6 months preceding implantation. Dual site atrial pacing (high right atrium‐coronary sinus ostium) was performed in 30 cases, and was compared to 53 single site paced patients, 21 with a P wave ≥ 120 ms and 32 with a P wave < 120 ms. The basic pacing rate was programmed at 68 ± 4 beats/min (range 60–75 beats/min). Sinus P wave (133 ± 20 vs 95 ± 9 ms; P < 0.001), paced P wave (107 ± 14 vs 99 ± 15; P < 0.05), number of antiarrhythmic drugs used (2.4 ±1.2 vs 1.6 ± 1.5, P < 0.05), and the duration of symptoms (8.1 ± 4.5 vs 3.8 ± 2.4 years; P < 0.001) were significantly higher in dual site patients. The other characteristics were similar. During the follow‐up of 18 ± 15 months (range 3–30 months), paroxysmal AF was documented in 33 patients. Among these patients, 13 developed permanent AF following at least one episode of paroxysmal AF. When comparing dual site patients and single site patients with a P wave duration ≥ 120 ms, paroxysmal AF incidence was lower in the dual site group (9/30 patients vs 15/21 patients, P < 0.01), as well as permanent AF (1/30 patients vs 8/21 patients, P < 0.01). By contrast, comparison between dual site patients and the group of single site patients with a P wave duration < 120 ms did not evidence any significant differences in paroxysmal (9/30 patients vs 9/32 patients) and permanent (1/30 patients vs 4/32 patients) AF incidences. Dual site seems better able than single site atrial pacing to improve the natural history of patients with a prolonged P wave, reducing the incidence of paroxysmal and permanent AF. No benefit could be expected in patients with a normal P wave duration.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1985
Brigitte Escoubet; Philippe Coumel; Jean-Marie Poirier; Pierre Maison-Blanche; Patrice Jaillon; Jean-François Leclercq; Philippe Menasché; Georges Cheymol; Armand Piwnica; Georges Lager; Robert Slama
In 65 patients a single oral dose of amiodarone (30 mg/kg) produced an antiarrhythmic effect on supraventricular or ventricular arrhythmias within 3 to 8 hours and lasted for 17 to 19 hours. On the second day a 15-mg/kg dose reproduced this effect within 3 to 9 hours. Plasma concentration of amiodarone increased to a maximum (2.2 +/- 1.7 mg/liter) mean +/- standard deviation) at 6 +/- 3.5 hours and plasma levels of N-desethylamiodarone (NDA) rose to 0.2 +/- 0.08 mg/liter at 12 +/- 6.4 hours. Sixty-one other patients were given a single 30-mg/kg dose 7 hours to 4 days before open heart surgery. Biopsies of the right atrial and left ventricular walls were taken during surgery. Myocardial concentration of amiodarone was maximal in the atrium after 7 hours (13 +/- 8 mg/kg) and in the ventricle after 24 hours (17 +/- 11 mg/kg). NDA myocardial concentration increased progressively until 24 hours and then remained stable over 4 days (1.5 mg/kg). The amiodarone myocardial to plasma concentration ratio was similar in the atrium and in the ventricle and averaged 22 and 10 for amiodarone and NDA, respectively. A significant relation existed between amiodarone concentration and the effect on ventricular premature complexes (r = 0.74, p less than 0.001) and between amiodarone plasma concentration and the effect on the atrioventricular conduction (r = 0.58, p less than 0.001). The plasma concentration of amiodarone corresponding to a 60% decrease in arrhythmias averaged 1.5 to 2 mg/liter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2000
Antonio De Sisti; Jean-François Leclercq; Pierre Fiorello; Stephanie Manot; Franck Halimi; Patrick Attuel
Electrophysiologic Characteristics in Sinus Node Dysfunction. Introduction: Clinical electrophysiology (EP) has focused attention on the EP properties of atrial muscle in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). Patients with sinus node dysfunction (SND) sometimes are included in these studies, but the characteristics of these patients with SND alone appear less well investigated.
Europace | 2008
Antonio De Sisti; Joelci Tonet; Fatima Gueffaf; Faouzi Touil; Jean-François Leclercq; Philip Aouate; Jérôme Lacotte; Françoise Hidden-Lucet; Robert Frank
AIMS The study aimed at evaluating the long-term effects of transient atrioventricular (AV) block on clinical outcomes during atrioventricular nodal re-entrant tachycardia (AVNRT) cryoablation. METHODS AND RESULTS In 150 consecutive patients (39 +/- 14 years, ineffective anti-arrhythmic drugs 1.9 +/- 1.3), slow-pathway cryoablation for AVNRT was performed. A 7 Fr 6 mm-tip cryocatheter was used. After successful cryomapping (-30 degrees C), defined as jump abolition or AV nodal refractory period prolongation, cryoablation (-80 degrees C for 4 min) was applied if no AV block occurred. Atrioventricular nodal re-entrant tachycardia inducibility was checked after 30 min. Acute success (AVNRT non-inducibility) was achieved in 142 patients (95%). Overall, after a follow-up of 18 +/- 10 months, 118 of 150 patients (79%) were recurrence-free (including 2 patients for whom the procedure was unsuccessful). Among successful procedures, 116 of 142 (82%) patients were recurrence-free. During cryoablation, inadvertent transient AV block of varying degrees occurred in 34 patients (22.7%), namely, increased PR in 17 patients and a 2nd-3rd AV block in the remaining 17. In 24 patients, AV block occurred at the last effective site (increased PR in 13 patients and a 2nd-3rd AV block in 11). In the study population as a whole, univariate predictors of recurrence in the follow-up were AVNRT inducibility (P < 0.001), increased PR at the last effective site (P < 0.001), residual jump (P < 0.02), and small Kochs triangle (X-ray distance < 11 mm between the His and coronary sinus ostium catheters; P < 0.02). Atrioventricular nodal re-entrant tachycardia inducibility (P < 0.03), increased PR (P < 0.01), and small Kochs triangle (P< 0.04) were independently significant. For attempts at the last effective site, 3 groups of patients were compared: 13 patients with increased PR duration (Group A), 11 with a 2nd-3rd AV block (Group B), and 126 without AV block (Group C). Cryo-application time was 277 +/- 203 s in Group A, 75 +/- 87 s in Group B, and 253 +/- 135 s in Group C (A vs. B, P < 0.01; B vs. C, P < 0.001; and C vs. A, P= NS). There was no statistical difference among groups in the atriogram/ventriculogram amplitude ratio at the site of the last attempt, unsuccessful acute procedure, small Kochs triangle, and residual jump. Actuarial incidence of recurrence-free status at 12 months was 38% in A, 82% in B, and 82% in C (A vs. B, P < 0.05; B vs. C, P = NS; and C vs. A, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION All AV blocks occurring during cryoablation were transient, confirming the safety of this method. An increased PR duration at the last effective site is associated with a higher recurrence rate, whereas a 2nd-3rd degree AV block has a recurrence rate similar to that of patients without AV block despite a shorter cryo-application time at the last site.
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2000
Antonio De Sisti; Patrick Attuel; Stephanie Manot; Pierre Fiorello; Franck Halimi; Jean-François Leclercq
. In patients with sinus node dysfunction (SND) with or without associated paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF), the effectiveness of atrial pacing in reducing the incidence of AF is not definitive. In addition, despite several studies involving large populations of implanted patients, little attention has been paid to the electrophysioiogicai (EP) atrial substrate and the effect of permanent atrial pacing. The aim of this study is to correlate EP data and the risk of AF after DDD device implantation. We reviewed FP data of 38 consecutive patients with SND. mean age 70 ± 8 years, who were investigated free of antiarrhythmic treatment, for the evaluation of the atrial substrate. We also considered as control group 25 subjects, mean age 63 ± 14 years, referred to our EP laboratory for unexplained syncope or various atrioventricular disturbances. Following pharmacological washout and at a drive cycle length of 600 ms. effective and functional refractory periods (ERP, FRP), Sl‐Al and S2‐A2 latency, Al and A2 conduction duration, and latent vulnerability index (EHP/A2) were measured. AF induction was tested with up to three extrastimuli at paced cycle lengths of 600 and 400 ms in 20 patients. Induction of sustained AF (> 30 seconds) was considered as the endpoint. P wave duration on the surface ECG in lead II/Vl was also measured. DDD pacing mode was chosen in all patients with the minimal atrial rate programmed between 60 and 75 beats/min (mean 64 ± 4 beats/min). After implantation, the patients were followed‐up for 29 ± 17 months and clinically documented occurrence of AF was determined. When comparing patients with SND and subjects of the control group, we did not find any significant statistical differences in terms of ERP (237 ± 33 vs 250 ± 29 ms), FRP (276 ± 30 vs 280 ± 32 ms) and Sl‐Al (39 ± 16 vs 33 ± 11 ms) and S2‐A2 latency (69 ± 24 vs 63 ± 25 ms). In contrast, we observed significant differences regarding Al (55 ± 19 vs 39 ± 13 ms; P < 0.001), A2 (95 ± 34 vs 57 ± 18 ms; P < 0.001) and P wave duration (104 ± 18 vs 94 ± 15 ms; P < 0.05), and ERP/A2 (2.8 ± 1.2 vs 4.8 ± 1.6; P < 0.001). When comparing patients with (n = 11) or without (n =27) postpacing AF occurrence, we did not find any difference with reference to ERP, FRP. Sl‐Al, S2‐A2, Al duration, or follow‐up duration. In patients with postpacing AF occurrence, A2 was longer (116 ± 41 vs 87 ± 27 ms; P < 0.01), FRP/A2 lower (2.1 ± 0.4 vs 3.1 ± 1.4; P < 0.05), P wave more prolonged (116 ± 22 vs 99 ± 14 ms; P < 0.01), and preexisting AF history predominant (6/11 vs 5/27 patients; P < 0.05). No difference was observed between patients with (n = 8) and without (n = 12) AF induction during the EP study. In patients with SND, the atrial refractoriness appears normal and the most important abnormality concerns conduction slowing disturbances. Persistence of AF despite pacing stresses the importance of mechanisms responsible for AF not entirely brady‐dependent. In this setting, more prolonged atrial conduction disturbances, responsible for a low vulnerability index, and a preexisting history of AF enable us to identify a high risk patient group for AF in the follow‐up. sinus node dysfunction, atrial fibrillation, electrophysiologicai study, atrial pacing
American Heart Journal | 1987
Philippe Coumel; Jean-François Leclercq; Antoine Leenhardt
Two methods are available for exploring arrhythmias in cardiac patients who are at risk of sudden death: Holter monitoring and invasive electrophysiology. Despite numerous studies, the predictive value of these techniques, in terms of prognosis, remains poor for many reasons. Neither technique considered individually can give reliable prognostic indications simply because each technique addresses different issues which are only partially involved in the mechanism of sudden death. Invasive electrophysiology, by artificially provoking an arrhythmia, detects the potential substrate which may ultimately lead to lethal arrhythmias. Although this is an important technique it is insufficient because merely identifying the substrate for an arrhythmia does not necessarily mean that arrhythmia will occur. On the other hand, ambulatory ECG allows monitoring of spontaneous arrhythmias which may be considered as potential initiating factors in arrhythmias. However, even if initiating factors and potential substrates are present, they are not sufficient conditions to cause lethal arrhythmias to occur. When there is an opportunity to scrutinize the mechanism of arrhythmias which are indeed lethal, as in sudden death, it appears that the lethal event results from the intervention of a new factor which was either absent or not considered during preceding investigations. In coronary patients, curiously, ischemia more often provokes cardiac arrest or an electromechanical dissociation rather than a ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation. Sudden death is not infrequently of iatrogenic origin, because of the arrhythmogenic effect of powerful antiarrhythmic drugs. More important, ventricular fibrillation often occurs in the setting of a progressively increased sympathetic tone, which explains either the particular seriousness of a previously known arrhythmia or the occurrence of an arrhythmia which was never before observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2003
Pascal Defaye; Jean-François Leclercq; Danièle Guilleman; Patrice Scanu; Jean‐René Hazard; Marjaneh Fatemi; Michel Boursier; Marie Lambiez
DEFAYE, P., et al. : Contributions of High Resolution Electrograms Memorized by DDDR Pacemakers in the Interpretation of Arrhythmic Events. The accuracy of information retrievable from the memories of DDDR pacing systems has been limited by the absence of actual electrograms confirming the proper sensing of spontaneous cardiac activity versus that of extraneous signals. This study examined the diagnostic power of a new arrhythmia interpretation scheme, which includes the recording and storage of high resolution endocavitary atrial and ventricular electrograms (HREGM). HREGM stored in the memories of new generation pacemakers (PM) in response to nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT), sustained VT, and atrial arrhythmias were analyzed in a follow‐up registry of 520 patients at 1 month, and 3 to 6 months after implantation of a PM for standard indications. For each sequence of stored HREGM, the accuracy of the PM response was examined, classified as accurate (true positive), versus inaccurate (false positive), versus undetermined, and the relative contribution of the HREGM in verifying the PM diagnosis was measured. During a follow‐up of 4.9 ± 2 months , 256 (49%) of the 520 patients had an event recorded, which was confirmed to be arrhythmic on the basis of HREGM. Overall, approximately 34% of atrialtachy response (ATR) episodes were confirmed to be appropriate. Similar percentages of episodes were prompted by oversensing of signals unrelated to cardiac arrhythmias, while nearly 12% of the episodes could not be clarified because of such brief duration as to preclude recording of their onset. Approximately one‐third of NSVT, and one‐half of VT detections were false positive. Ventricular oversensing, most often due to myopotential interference in presence of unipolar sensing, and atrial undersensing were both identified as sources of false‐positive detections of ventricular events. The proportion of true‐positive detections was significantly higher in the bipolar (83%) than unipolar configuration. Among 520 PM recipients, miscellaneous episodes of atrial arrhythmias were confirmed by HREGM in 37% of patients within 3 to 6 months of follow‐up. Atrial fibrillation was confirmed in only 6% of patients, of whom over 50% already had histories of atrial fibrillation. The prevalence of unsuspected atrial arrhythmia in this unselected population was lower than previously reported. (PACE 2003; 26[Pt. II]:214–220)