Joel E. Cutler
Oregon Health & Science University
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Circulation | 1990
Michael J. Silka; Jack Kron; Charles G. Walance; Joel E. Cutler; John H. McAnulty
In the young patient resuscitated from sudden cardiac arrest, the risks of recurrence are uncertain and so are the criteria defining therapeutic efficacy for the presumed cause of the initial event. In this study, we analyzed the outcome of 15 consecutive young patients, who were resuscitated from pulseless ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation and who were evaluated by comprehensive hemodynamic and electrophysiological testing. Patients were 11.2 +/- 2.7 (mean +/- SD) years old at the time of their event, and each was known to have some form of heart disease before sudden cardiac arrest. Ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation was inducible by programmed electrical stimulation in eight patients. Accessory atrioventricular connections, with antegrade effective refractory periods less than 220 msec, were identified in three patients. Sustained atrial flutter was the only arrhythmia inducible in two patients, and no arrhythmias were inducible in two other patients. Surgical or electrophysiological-guided medical therapy resulted in noninducibility of the ventricular arrhythmias in six patients. Surgical division of the accessory atrioventricular connections was performed in three patients, and arrhythmias were not inducible after operation. The four patients with atrial flutter or without defined arrhythmia were treated with an empiric therapy. During 37 +/- 14 months of follow-up, the nine patients with documented noninducibility of a defined cause of sudden cardiac arrest were free of recurrent events. In contrast, during 18 +/- 10 months of follow-up, two of the six patients with empiric therapy or persistent inducibility of ventricular tachycardia died suddenly, and three others had recurrence of ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993
Brian G Crandall; Cynthia D. Morris; Joel E. Cutler; Peter J. Kudenchuk; Jan Peterson; L.Bing Liem; David R. Broudy; H. Leon Greene; Blair D. Halperin; John H. McAnulty; Jack Kron
OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) therapy in survivors of sudden cardiac death in whom no ventricular arrhythmias can be induced with programmed electrical stimulation. BACKGROUND Survivors of sudden cardiac death in whom ventricular arrhythmias cannot be induced with programmed electrical stimulation remain at risk for recurrence of serious arrhythmias. Optimal protection to prevent sudden death in these patients is uncertain. This study compares survival in the subset of survivors of sudden cardiac death with that of patients treated with or without an ICD. METHODS A retrospective study was performed on 194 consecutive survivors of primary sudden death who had < or = 6 beats of ventricular tachycardia induced with programmed electrical stimulation with at least three extrastimuli. Ninety-nine patients received an ICD and 95 did not. RESULTS There were no significant differences between the two groups in presenting rhythm, number of prior myocardial infarctions or use of antiarrhythmic agents. Patients treated with an ICD were younger (55 +/- 16 vs. 59 +/- 11 years, p = 0.03) and had a lesser incidence of coronary artery disease (48% vs. 63%, p = 0.04) and a lower ejection fraction (0.43 +/- 0.16 vs. 0.48 +/- 0.18, p = 0.04). There were no significant differences between the groups in the use of revascularization procedures or antiarrhythmic agents after the sudden cardiac death. Patients treated with an ICD had an improvement in sudden cardiac death-free survival (p = 0.04) but the overall survival rate did not differ from that of the patients not so treated (p = 0.91). A multivariate regression analysis that adjusted for the observed differences between the groups did not alter these results. CONCLUSIONS Survivors of sudden cardiac death in whom no arrhythmias could be induced with programmed electrical stimulation remained at risk for arrhythmia recurrence. Although the proportion of deaths attributed to arrhythmias was lower in the patients treated with an ICD, this therapy did not significantly improve overall survival.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1990
Peter J. Kudenchuk; Jack Kron; Charles G. Walance; Joel E. Cutler; Karen Griffith; John H. McAnulty
Forty-nine patients with coronary artery disease and documented clinical sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation (VF) were studied twice in the drug-free state and twice during treatment with an identical antiarrhythmic medication at therapeutic plasma concentrations using an identical programmed electrical stimulation protocol. Tested drugs included procainamide, quinidine, disopyramide and phenytoin. During their 2 paired tests, 11 patients had nearly identical therapeutic plasma concentrations of antiarrhythmic agents (group I) and 38 patients had therapeutic plasma concentrations, but with more variation in drug levels between otherwise identical paired drug tests (group II). Overall, 71% of patients had inducible sustained VT or VF during drug testing. Induced ventricular arrhythmias were not reproducible in 45% of group I patients, despite restudy at nearly identical therapeutic plasma concentrations of an identical antiarrhythmic agent. Induced arrhythmias were also not reproducible in 16% of group II patients. This variability could not be attributed to the electrophysiologic characteristics of the patients studied. Drug trials directed by programmed stimulation should be cautiously interpreted because time-associated changes can mimic a change attributed to a beneficial or deleterious drug effect.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1990
James H. McClelland; Blair D. Halperin; Joel E. Cutler; Peter J. Kudenchuk; Jack Kron; John H. McAnulty
Although sudden cardiac deaths and ischemic cardiac events clearly occur in a circadian pattern, such a pattern has not been shown for primary arrhythmic events. Because primary arrhythmic events are thought to play an important role in sudden cardiac death, a large series of ventricular stimulation studies was analyzed to determine whether circadian variation in ventricular electrical instability exists. If such a circadian variation could be shown, it could have implications for the conduct and interpretation of electrophysiologic testing and the etiology of circadian variation in sudden cardiac death. Results of 2 drug-free ventricular stimulation studies performed 4 to 28 hours apart in each of 162 patients with coronary artery disease were analyzed. Rate and duration of induced arrhythmia, number of extrastimuli required to induce arrhythmia and changes in these factors between the 2 tests in each patient were analyzed. Comparisons were made by half-day, by hour and in a temporally continuous manner to eliminate errors associated with any single method. No significant circadian variation was found in any electrophysiologic measure of ventricular electrical instability despite adequate statistical power. These findings show that the time of day during which ventricular stimulation tests are performed does not affect test results, and therefore does not need to be controlled during electrophysiologic studies. If these findings are parallel to those in ambulatory patients with coronary artery disease, then circadian changes in ventricular electrical instability may not play as important a role in the circadian pattern of sudden cardiac death as had been previously thought.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1990
Michael J. Silka; Jack Kron; Joel E. Cutler; John H. McAnulty
The purpose of this study was to systematically evaluate programmed ventricular stimulation in patients less than 21 years of age undergoing electrophysiologic testing. A standardized protocol was applied in 55 consecutive patients (mean age 14 years) with the following clinical presentations: sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) (n = 17); ventricular fibrillation (VF) (n = 7); syncope with heart disease (n = 10); nonsustained VT (n = 6); and syncope with an ostensibly normal heart (n = 15). The stimulation protocol consisted of 1 and 2 ventricular extrastimuli during sinus rhythm, followed by 1 to 4 (S2, S3, S4, S5) extrastimuli during pacing at 2 ventricular sites. Of the 17 patients with sustained VT, 12 had induction of the arrhythmia (sensitivity = 71%). Overall, 18 of 55 patients had inducible sustained VT, with this response significantly enhanced by use of S4 or S5 protocols (p = 0.02). Although no syncope patients with an ostensibly normal heart had inducible sustained VT, 7 had polymorphic nonsustained VT in response to ventricular stimulation. The mean number of extra-stimuli preceding the induction of nonsustained or sustained VT or VF did not differ. The induction of VF in 5 cases during this study was preceded in each case by extrastimuli intervals less than or equal to 190 ms. Thus, data indicate that aggressive stimulation protocols appear to be required for induction of sustained VT in most young patients, nonsustained polymorphic VT as a response to aggressive programmed stimulation is of uncertain significance, and that coupling intervals less than or equal to 190 ms may correlate with the induction of VF.
American Heart Journal | 1988
Ying Sui A Lo; Joel E. Cutler; Allan Wright; Jack Kron; Kathleen Blake; Charles D. Swerdlow
Angiographically irregular coronary stenoses usually represent plaque rupture with or without superimposed thrombi. Long-segment coronary stenoses with diffuse irregularities (type IIB morphology) have been shown to be more prevalent than focal irregular lesions (type IIA morphology) in survivors of cardiac arrest without acute myocardial infarction. To further understand the pathogenetic importance of type IIB morphology, the clinical and angiographic characteristics in 59 such patients were analyzed. Type IIB lesions accounted for 63% of all type II lesions. Type IIB patients were older than type IIA patients (p less than 0.05). There was a tendency for type IIB morphology to be associated with more extensive disease than other types of lesion morphology (p less than 0.10). Type IIB morphology probably reflects more advanced atherosclerosis. Platelet microemboli may precipitate spasm and/or acute ischemic ventricular tachyarrhythmias. It is possible that long-segment coronary ulcerations are associated with a higher risk for local coronary thromboembolism, and hence with sudden death, than focal lesions.
Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 1989
Daniel C. Hatton; Eugene R. Gilden; Mary Ellen Edwards; Joel E. Cutler; Jack Kron; John H. McAnulty
Plasma catecholamine levels were measured preceding programmed electrophysiological studies of patients who had survived a ventricular tachyarrhythmia episode. Psychological assessments of desire for control, locus of control and behavior pattern were obtained. Psychophysiological variables were analysed with respect to the severity of arrhythmias induced by the electrophysiological procedure. Analysis of data from 17 subjects showed desire for control was significantly higher in those with induced sustained arrhythmias than in those in which nonsustained arrhythmias were induced. No relationship was found between behavior pattern and arrhythmia severity or plasma catecholamine levels. There was a significant interaction between desire for control and behavior pattern with respect to epinephrine level. The findings indicate that psychological factors such as desire for control may be associated with potentially lethal arrhythmias and implicated in sudden cardiac death.
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1990
Michael J. Silka; Jack Kron; Joel E. Cutler; Richard A. Wilson; Adnan Cobanoglu
Paroxysmal wide QRS tachycardia, based on a nodoventricular accessory connection, is an uncommon arrhythmia. In this report, the endocardial and epicardial mapping and Cryoablation of a nodoventricular fiber, documented to participate in medically refractory tachycardia in an 11‐year‐old boy, are described. Epicardial cryothermia, applied at the earliest site of right ventricular activation, resulted in the abrupt termination of tachycardia. Endocardial cryothermia was subsequently applied in the perinodal region, the presumed site of origin of the nodoventricular fiber. No tachyarrhythmias were inducible postoperatively, and no antiarrhythmic treatment has been required during 18 months of follow‐up. Based on precise anatomic localization of the nodoventricular connection, a definitive cure of associated tachyarrhythmias may be possible utilizing cryothermia, without the requirement for extensive intraoperative dissection.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1990
James H. McClelland; Joel E. Cutler; Jack Kron; John H. McAnulty
Two methods of serial electrophysiologic testing are in widespread use. Most commonly, the electrode catheter is removed after each study and a new catheter reinserted through the femoral vein for every subsequent test. An alternative method employs an electrode catheter that remains in place during several days of serial testing. Little is known about differences between these two methods with respect to the likelihood of induction of arrhythmia or the frequency of complications. To determine whether inducibility of sustained arrhythmia is altered or if the frequency of complications is unacceptably high with use of an indwelling catheter, a prospective randomized study was conducted in 78 patients. Each patient underwent baseline testing, several days of electropharmacologic testing with an indwelling catheter, a 24 h drug elimination period and placement of a new electrode catheter. Ventricular stimulation studies were then performed in each patient with both the indwelling and new electrode catheters. No differences were found between the indwelling and new catheter tests with respect to induction of arrhythmia, number of extrastimuli required to induce arrhythmia, rate of arrhythmia or requirement for cardioversion. Ventricular pacing thresholds were higher and effective refractory periods were slightly longer when measured with the indwelling catheter. Complications related to the 156 catheter insertions included two that may have been related to the indwelling catheter (one episode of staphylococcal sepsis and one presumed pulmonary embolism) and four that were related to invasive procedures (pneumothorax in all). There were no long-term adverse sequelae of these complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
JAMA | 1994
Greg C. Larsen; Melody R. Stupey; Charles G. Walance; Karen Griffith; Joel E. Cutler; Jack Kron; John H. McAnulty