Michael de Buitleir
University of Michigan
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The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991
Hugh Calkins; Joao Sousa; Rafel El-Atassi; Shimon Rosenheck; Michael de Buitleir; William H. Kou; Alan H. Kadish; Jonathan J. Langberg; Fred Morady
BACKGROUND We conducted this study to determine the feasibility of an abbreviated therapeutic approach to the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome or paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, in which the diagnosis is established and radiofrequency ablation carried out during a single electrophysiologic test. METHODS One hundred six consecutive patients were referred for the management of documented, symptomatic paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardias (66 patients) or the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (40 patients). All agreed to undergo a diagnostic electrophysiologic test and catheter ablation with radiofrequency current. No patient had had such a test previously. RESULTS Among the 66 patients with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardias, the mechanism was found to be atrioventricular nodal reentry in 46 (70 percent) (typical in 44 and atypical in 2), atrioventricular reciprocating tachycardia involving a concealed accessory pathway in 16 (24 percent), atrial tachycardia in 2 (3 percent), and noninducible paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia in 2 (3 percent). A successful long-term outcome was achieved in 57 of 62 patients (92 percent) with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia in whom ablation was attempted and in 37 of 40 patients (93 percent) with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. The only complications were one instance of occlusion of the left circumflex coronary artery, leading to acute myocardial infarction, and one instance of complete atrioventricular block. The mean (+/- SD) duration of the electrophysiologic procedures was 114 +/- 55 minutes. CONCLUSIONS The diagnosis and cure of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia or the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome during a single electrophysiologic test are feasible and practical and have a favorable risk-benefit ratio. This abbreviated therapeutic approach may eliminate the need for serial electropharmacologic testing, long-term drug therapy, antitachycardia pacemakers, and surgical ablation.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1991
Fred Morady; Alan H. Kadish; Shimon Rosenheck; Hugh Calkins; William H. Kou; Michael de Buitleir; Joao Sousa
Fifteen consecutive patients with drug-refractory, recurrent, sustained, monomorphic ventricular tachycardia and a history of remote myocardial infarction underwent catheter ablation of ventricular tachycardia. Shocks of 100 to 300 J were delivered to sites at which pacing during ventricular tachycardia resulted in concealed entrainment, in which the ventricular tachycardia accelerated to the pacing rate, there was a long stimulus to QRS interval and there was no change in the configuration of the QRS complex during pacing at several rates compared with the configuration during ventricular tachycardia, thus identifying a zone of slow conduction in the reentrant circuit. Concealed entrainment was demonstrated in nine (60%) of 15 patients, and the stimulus to QRS intervals were 90 to 400 ms. At sites of concealed entrainment, the endocardial activation time relative to the QRS complex during ventricular tachycardia ranged from -125 to +50 ms, the timing of the local electrogram relative to the QRS complex was the same during entrainment as during ventricular tachycardia and the pace map during sinus rhythm was discordant with that of the ventricular tachycardia in seven patients. In the six patients in whom a site of concealed entrainment could not be identified, the target site for ablation was selected on the basis of identification of an isolated mid-diastolic potential, activation mapping and pace mapping. The mean (+/- SD) cumulative number of joules delivered to the target site was 306 +/- 140. A successful long-term clinical outcome was achieved in 9 of the 15 patients (mean follow-up 20 +/- 7 months). The clinical success rate was the same whether the target site was selected on the basis of concealed entrainment (five of nine, 56%) or on the basis of the other mapping techniques (four of six, 67%). In conclusion, the responses to pacing suggest that sites at which there is concealed entrainment may be located within a zone of slow conduction in the ventricular tachycardia reentry circuit, although not necessarily in an area critical for the maintenance of reentry. The long-term clinical efficacy of catheter ablation targeted to sites of concealed entrainment is about 60%, similar to the results achieved when conventional mapping techniques are used.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1988
Fred Morady; Robert Frank; William H. Kou; Joelci Tonet; Steven D. Nelson; Semplice Kounde; Michael de Buitleir; Guy Fontaine
Three patients who had incessant ventricular tachycardia and in whom a zone of slow conduction was identified are presented. Each patients tachycardia was refractory to multiple antiarrhythmic drugs and was being treated with amiodarone at the time of the electrophysiologic study. The ventricular tachycardia cycle length was 500 to 580 ms. In Patients 1 and 2, a single site at the posterolateral wall or low septum in the left ventricle was identified at which overdrive pacing during ventricular tachycardia resulted in ventricular capture with a stimulus to QRS interval of 280 to 400 ms and with little or no change in the configuration of the QRS complexes during pacing as compared with during ventricular tachycardia. In Patient 3, the same phenomenon was observed at two areas in the left ventricle: at the inferior wall, overdrive pacing during ventricular tachycardia resulted in a stimulus to QRS interval of 440 to 470 ms, whereas at the posterolateral wall, the stimulus to QRS interval was 320 to 360 ms. Transcatheter shocks of 100 to 240 J delivered at the pacing sites have been successful in preventing recurrences of ventricular tachycardia over a follow-up period of 10 to 11 months. These observations may be explained by the pacing site being located within a reentrant circuit in a zone of slow conduction bounded by inexcitable tissue between the pacing site and the exit site of the reentrant circuit. In Patient 3, the variable stimulus to QRS intervals are explained by variable proximity of the pacing sites within the slow conduction zone to the exit site of the reentrant circuit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
American Journal of Cardiology | 1986
Sunil K. Das; Fred Morady; Lorenzo A. DiCarlo; Jeffrey M. Baerman; Ryszard B. Krol; Michael de Buitleir; Barry J. Crevey
Twenty-four patients, mean age 42 years, with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DC) and no history of symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias underwent right ventricular programmed stimulation with up to 3 extrastimuli. Ventricular tachycardia (VT) was induced in 8 patients and ventricular fibrillation (VF) in 2. The VT was unimorphic in 2 and polymorphic in 6. No significant differences were noted between patients in whom arrhythmias were inducible and and those in whom they were not with regard to age, symptomatic class, arrhythmia severity or hemodynamic indexes. Over a mean follow-up of 12 months, 4 patients died, 3 suddenly and 1 with progressive heart failure. Only 1 of the 3 who died suddenly had inducible VT. One other patient with induced sustained unimorphic VT later presented with spontaneous sustained VT similar in rate and configuration to induced VT. In conclusion, VT or VF may be induced in approximately 40% of patients with DC and no history of symptomatic VT or VF. Inducibility of polymorphic VT or VF does not correlate with clinical or hemodynamic variables or with the risk of sudden death. However, induction of unimorphic VT may predict later occurrence of spontaneous unimorphic VT.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987
Ryszard B. Krol; Fred Morady; Greg C. Flaker; Lorenzo A. DiCarlo; Jeffrey M. Baerman; John Hewett; Michael de Buitleir
To assess whether the level of risk of having significant electrophysiologic abnormalities can be determined, 29 clinical variables were analyzed in 104 patients with unexplained syncope who underwent electrophysiologic testing. A positive electrophysiologic study was defined as: a sinus node recovery time greater than or equal to 3 seconds; HV interval greater than or equal to 100 ms; infranodal block during atrial pacing; unimorphic ventricular tachycardia; and supraventricular tachycardia associated with hypotension. Thirty-one patients had a positive study, with inducible ventricular tachycardia being the most common finding (71% of positive studies). A left ventricular ejection fraction less than or equal to 0.40 was the most powerful predictor of a positive electrophysiologic study (p less than 0.00001), followed by the presence of bundle branch block (p less than 0.00003), coronary artery disease (p less than 0.0003), remote myocardial infarction (p less than 0.00006), use of type 1 antiarrhythmic drugs (p less than 0.00003), injury related to loss of consciousness (p less than 0.01) and male sex (p less than 0.01). A negative electrophysiologic study was associated with an ejection fraction greater than 0.40 (p less than 0.00001), the absence of structural heart disease (p less than 0.00001), a normal electrocardiogram (ECG) (p less than 0.0001) and normal ambulatory ECG monitoring (p less than 0.0001). The probability of a negative study increased as the number and duration of syncopal episodes increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1986
Lorenzo A. DiCarlo; Fred Morady; Michael de Buitleir; Ryszard B. Krol; Lois Schurig; Thomas M. Annesley
Magnesium has been used empirically for several decades in the treatment of atrial and ventricular arrhythmias in patients with normal and decreased serum magnesium levels. However, a systematic evaluation of the effects of magnesium on cardiac conduction and refractoriness in humans has not been described. In this study, the electrocardiographic and electrophysiologic effects of magnesium were determined in 10 patients with normal baseline serum magnesium and other electrolyte levels. Six grams of magnesium sulfate was administered intravenously over 6 minutes followed by a continuous infusion of 1 additional gram over 1 hour. Serum magnesium levels rose significantly from a baseline of 2.0 +/- 0.2 to 5.4 +/- 0.4 mg/dl (p less than 0.001). No significant change occurred in heart rate at rest, or in duration of the QRS complex or QT or QTc intervals during sinus rhythm. There were significant increases in sinus node recovery time (1,000 +/- 211 to 1,106 +/- 223 ms, p less than 0.01) and corrected sinus node recovery time (279 +/- 87 to 336 +/- 104 ms, p less than 0.05). Significant increases occurred in atrioventricular (AV) node conduction time during sinus rhythm (82 +/- 22 to 97 +/- 17 ms, p less than 0.02), in the atrial paced cycle length at which AV node Wenckebach block occurred (350 +/- 46 to 419 +/- 65 ms, p less than 0.01) and in the AV node relative refractory period (397 +/- 27 to 422 +/- 18 ms, p less than 0.05), functional refractory period (395 +/- 41 to 415 +/- 33 ms, p less than 0.05) and effective refractory period (306 +/- 67 to 338 +/- 38 ms, p less than 0.05).
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993
Fred Morady; Hugh Calkins; Jonathan J. Langberg; William F. Armstrong; Michael de Buitleir; Rafel El-Atassi; Steven J. Kalbfleisch
OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to compare direct current and radiofrequency ablation of the atrioventricular (AV) junction in a prospective randomized fashion. BACKGROUND Catheter ablation of the AV junction can be performed using either direct current shocks or radiofrequency energy. To date, these two techniques have never been compared prospectively or in a randomized study. METHODS Forty patients with drug-refractory uncontrolled atrial fibrillation-flutter (38 patients) or inappropriate sinus tachycardia (2 patients) were randomly assigned to undergo direct current ablation (20 patients) using up to four shocks of 200 to 300 J or radiofrequency ablation (20 patients) using up to 15 applications of 16 to 25 W for 30 s. If complete AV block was not successfully induced, the ablation procedure was repeated using the alternate type of energy. A rate-responsive ventricular pacemaker was implanted in each patient. The intrinsic escape rhythm was evaluated 15 min, 2 days and 3, 6 and 12 months after ablation. RESULTS Persistent complete AV block was successfully induced during the first ablation session in 13 (65%) of 20 patients randomly assigned to undergo direct current ablation, compared with 19 (95%) of 20 patients randomly assigned to undergo radiofrequency ablation (p < 0.05). Each patient whose first ablation attempt failed had a successful outcome with the alternate type of energy. The overall efficacy of radiofrequency ablation (26 [96%] of 27 patients) was significantly greater than that of direct current ablation (14 [67%] of 21 patients, p < 0.01). The duration of the direct current and radiofrequency ablation sessions did not differ significantly. The mean peak plasma creatine kinase MB fraction concentration was significantly higher after direct current ablation (58 +/- 29 IU/liter) than after radiofrequency ablation (2 +/- 2 IU/liter) (p < 0.001). An escape rhythm was present 15 min after ablation in an equal proportion of patients undergoing direct current and radiofrequency ablation (78% and 85%, respectively, p = 0.6). An escape rhythm was present in all patients 3, 6 and 12 months after ablation. The mean escape rhythm cycle length 15 min after direct current ablation (2,074 +/- 677 ms) was significantly longer than that 15 min after radiofrequency ablation (1,460 +/- 294 ms) (p < 0.05); however, the mean escape rhythm cycle lengths did not differ significantly at 2 days or 3, 6 or 12 months after ablation. Immediate arrhythmic complications did not occur after either procedure. One patient died suddenly 6.5 months after direct current ablation. CONCLUSIONS Radiofrequency ablation of the AV junction is more efficacious and safer than direct current ablation and should be the preferred method for inducing complete AV block in patients who are appropriate candidates for ablation of AV conduction.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1987
Jeffrey M. Baerman; Marvin M. Kirsh; Michael de Buitleir; Logan Hyatt; Jack E. Juni; Bertram Pitt; Fred Morady
Ninety-three consecutive patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) were followed prospectively to ascertain the natural history and determinants of new postoperative conduction defects. Each patient was followed in the postoperative period with serial electrocardiograms and continuous monitoring. In the last 70 patients, a technetium pyrophosphate scan was obtained 48 to 72 hours after operation. Postoperatively, new bundle-branch or fascicular block developed in 42 patients (45%) and third-degree atrioventricular (AV) block, in 4 (4%). The occurrence was compared with patient age, preoperative bundle-branch block or fascicular block, number of diseased arteries, number of bypassed arteries, total time of cardiopulmonary bypass, aortic cross-clamping time, occurrence of a preoperative or perioperative myocardial infarction, and presence of disease in the left anterior descending or right coronary artery. Only the number of bypassed arteries, the total time of cardiopulmonary bypass, and the aortic cross-clamping time were related to the development of postoperative conduction defects (all, p less than .05). The conduction defect resolved partially or completely by the time of hospital discharge in 54% of patients. In the 4 patients with third-degree AV block, AV block resolved on postoperative day 2 in 1 patient and resolved transiently for up to 5 days or persisted in 3 patients. At two months of follow-up, all 3 patients discharged in third-degree AV block with a permanent pacemaker were no longer in AV block. In conclusion, following CABG, the occurrence of new AV conduction defects is related to the number of vessels bypassed, the cardiopulmonary bypass pump time, and the aortic cross-clamping time.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1986
Fred Morady; Lorenzo A. DiCarlo; Ryszard B. Krol; Jeffrey M. Baerman; Michael de Buitleir
In eight patients, the right ventricular effective refractory period, rate-dependent changes in intraventricular conduction (as reflected by QRS duration during ventricular paced cycle lengths of 600 to 250 ms) and results of programmed ventricular stimulation were determined in the control state, 5 minutes after the intravenous infusion of 10 mg/kg body weight of amiodarone and after 2 months of treatment with oral amiodarone. The right ventricular effective refractory period was 230 +/- 30 ms (mean +/- SD) in the control study, 248 +/- 27 ms after intravenous amiodarone (p less than 0.001) and 296 +/- 26 ms after oral amiodarone (p less than 0.001). In the control state, QRS duration was constant at all paced cycle lengths. Intravenous amiodarone resulted in a rate-dependent prolongation of QRS duration. This rate-dependent prolongation was markedly accentuated by oral amiodarone in six patients who had an elevated serum level of reverse triiodothyronine (T3) after 2 months of oral treatment, but it was not more pronounced than the effects of intravenous amiodarone in two patients with a normal reverse T3 serum level after oral therapy. Both intravenous and oral amiodarone either suppressed or modified the induction of ventricular tachycardia by programmed stimulation in some patients, but in a discordant fashion. The relative effects of intravenous and oral amiodarone on ventricular refractoriness and conduction and on ventricular tachycardia induction did not correlate with serum amiodarone levels. Chronic amiodarone therapy results in a marked prolongation in ventricular refractoriness compared with the relatively small but significant increase that occurs after intravenous amiodarone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1987
Jeffrey M. Baerman; Fred Morady; Lorenzo A. DiCarlo; Michael de Buitleir
The purpose of this study was to assess whether the clinical history is of any value in the differentiation in the emergency department of ventricular tachycardia (VT) from supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) with aberration. The records of 84 patients who presented with a wide-complex tachycardia and who were able to provide a history were reviewed. The wide-complex tachycardia was proven by a later electrophysiologic study to be VT in 62 patients and SVT with aberration in 22 patients. History of prior myocardial infarction, history of congestive heart failure, and history of recent angina pectoris all had positive predictive values for VT of greater than 95%, but had sensitivities of 66%, 24%, and 24%, respectively. Age greater than 35 years had a sensitivity of 92% and a positive predictive value of 85% for VT. None of the clinical characteristics was strongly predictive for SVT; the best was age less than or equal to 35 years, which had a positive predictive value of 70%. We conclude that clinical variables may be helpful in the emergency department diagnosis of wide-complex tachycardias. If a patient with a wide-complex tachycardia has a history of myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, or recent angina pectoris, the tachycardia has a high likelihood of being ventricular in origin. However, there are no clinical variables that are highly predictive of SVT with aberration.