Mohammad Jazayeri
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
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Circulation | 1992
Mohammad Jazayeri; Sandy L. Hempe; Jasbir Sra; Anwer Dhala; Zalman Blanck; Sanjay Deshpande; Boaz Avitall; David Krum; Carol Gilbert; Masood Akhtar
Background The safety and efficacy of selective fast versus slow pathway ablation using radiofrequency energy and a transcatheter technique in patients with atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT) were evaluated. Methods and Results Forty-nine consecutive patients with symptomatic AVNRT were included. There were 37 women and 12 men (mean age, 43±20 years). The first 16 patients underwent a fast pathway ablation with radiofrequency current applied in the anterior/superior aspect of the tricuspid annulus. The remaining 33 patients initially had their slow pathway targeted at the posterior/inferior aspect of the right interatrial septum. The fast pathway was successfully ablated in the initial 16 patients and in three additional patients after an unsuccessful slow pathway ablation. A mean of 10±8 radiofrequency pulses were delivered; the last (successful) pulse was at a power of24±7W for a duration of22±15 seconds. Four of these 19 patients developed complete atrioventricular (AV) block. In the remaining 15 patients, the post-ablation atrio-His intervals prolonged from 89±30 to 138±43 msec (p < 0.001), whereas the shortest 1:1 AV conduction and effective refractory period of the AV node remained unchanged. Ten patients lost their ventriculoatrial (VA) conduction, and the other five had a significant prolongation of the shortest cycle length of 1:1 VA conduction (280±35 versus 468±30 msec, p < 0.0001). Slow pathway ablation was attempted initially in 33 patients and in another two who developed uncommon AVNRT after successful fast pathway ablation. Of these 35 patients, 32 had no AVNRT inducible after 6 4 radiofrequency pulses with the last (successful) pulse given at a power of 36±12 W for a duration of 35±15 seconds. After successful slow pathway ablation, the shortest cycle length of 1:1 AV conduction prolonged from 295±44 to 332±66 msec (p < 0.0005), the AV nodal effective refractory penrod increased from 232±36 to 281±61 msec (p < 0.0001), and the atrio-His interval as well as the shortest cycle length of 1:1 VA conduction remained unchanged. No patients developed AV block. Among the last 33 patients who underwent a slow pathway ablation as the initial attempt and a fast pathway ablation only when the former failed, 32 (97%) had successful AVNRT abolition with intact AV conduction. During a mean follow-up of 6.5±3.0 months, none of the 49 patients had recurrent tachycardia. Forty patients had repeat electrophysiological studies 4–8 weeks after their successful ablation, and AVNRT could not be induced in 39 patients Conclusions These data suggest that both fast and slow pathways can be selectively ablated for control of AVNRT. Slow pathway ablation, however, by obviating the risk of AV block, appears to be safer and should be considered as the first approach.
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 1993
Zalmen Blanck; Anwer Dhala; Sanjay Deshpande; Jasbir Sra; Mohammad Jazayeri; Masood Akhtar
Sustained Bundle Branch Reentrant Tachycardia. introduction: The clinical, electrophysiologic features and follow‐up of 48 patients with inducible bundle branch reentrant (BBR) tachycardia are presented.
Circulation | 1995
Andrea Natale; Masood Akhtar; Mohammad Jazayeri; Anwer Dhala; Zalmen Blanck; Sanjay Deshpande; Anita C. Krebs; Jasbir Sra
BACKGROUND Head-up tilt test is increasingly being used to evaluate patients with syncope. This study was designed to evaluate the specificity of head-up tilt testing using different tilt angles and isoproterenol infusion doses in normal volunteers with no prior history of syncope or presyncope. METHODS AND RESULTS One hundred fifty volunteers were randomized to two groups of 75 each. In group 1, subjects were further randomized to have head-up tilt testing at a 60, 70, or 80 degree angle at baseline followed by repeat tilt testing during a low-dose isoproterenol infusion that increased the heart rate by an average of 20%. In group 2, after having a baseline head-up tilt test at a 70 degree angle for a maximum of 20 minutes, subjects were randomized to have a repeat tilt table testing at a 70 degree angle during a low-dose, 3 micrograms/min, or 5 micrograms/min isoproterenol infusion. In group 1, syncope or presyncope along with hypotension developed in 2 subjects during the baseline test at 60 and 70 degrees of tilt and in 5 subjects during tilting at 80 degrees. The addition of low-dose isoproterenol reduced the specificity minimally from 92% to 88% at both 60 and 70 degrees of tilt but substantially to 60% at an 80 degrees angle. However, 6 of the 10 subjects with a positive test at an 80 degree angle had an abnormal response after 10 minutes of tilt testing. In group 2, using various isoproterenol doses with tilt table testing at a 70 degree angle, low-dose (mean infusion dose, 1.5 +/- 0.45 microgram/min), 3 micrograms/min, and 5 micrograms/min isoproterenol infusions elicited an abnormal response in 1 (4%), 5 (20%), and 14 (56%) of the subjects, respectively. Using multiple logistic regression analysis, head-up tilt testing at an 80 degree angle (P = .01) or during 3 micrograms/min (P = .02) and 5 micrograms/min isoproterenol infusion rates (P < .001) was the most significant predictor of an abnormal response. CONCLUSIONS Head-up tilt testing at a 60 or 70 degree angle with or without low-dose isoproterenol infusion provides an adequate specificity. Caution is needed, however, in interpreting the results if the head-up tilt test at 80 degrees is extended beyond 10 minutes or if high doses of isoproterenol are used.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1994
Jasbir Sra; Vishnubhakta S. Murthy; Andrea Natale; Mohammad Jazayeri; Anwer Dhala; Sanjay Deshpande; Mita Sheth; Masood Akhtar
Changes in heart rate, arterial pressure, norepinephrine and epinephrine levels were compared in 19 consecutive patients (10 men and 9 women, mean age 46 +/- 16 years) with neurocardiogenic syncope and 11 age- and sex-matched control subjects (5 men and 6 women, mean age 49 +/- 15 years) during head-up tilt testing. Norepinephrine and epinephrine levels were measured at the baseline supine position, in the initial upright position, every 90 seconds during the 70 degrees upright tilt, at the time of termination due to hypotension and syncope (or at 15 minutes in control subjects), and at 40 seconds and 1 minute and 40 seconds in the supine position after terminating the head-up tilt test. Baseline norepinephrine, epinephrine and heart rate were slightly higher in patients. Despite a significant decrease in mean arterial pressure during head-up tilt testing in patients (51 +/- 20 mm Hg; p < 0.001), norepinephrine levels in patients and control subjects at the time of terminating the head-up tilt test were comparable (459 +/- 204 vs 473 +/- 172 pg/ml). A fivefold increase in epinephrine levels (73 +/- 53 to 345 +/- 260 pg/ml; p < 0.01) were seen in patients, whereas control subjects had insignificant change (38 +/- 16 to 65 +/- 44 pg/ml). It is concluded that diminished neuronal sympathetic activity and enhanced adrenomedullary activity is demonstrated during head-up tilt testing in patients with neurocardiogenic syncope.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993
Boaz Avitall; Miqdad Khan; David Krum; John Hare; Cynthia Lessila; Anwer Dhala; Sanjay Deshpande; Mohammad Jazayeri; Jasbir Sra; Masood Akhtar
Ablation of arrhythmogenic cardiac tissues has emerged as one of the most important advances in cardiac electrophysiology. With the introduction of transcatheter ablation, the treatment of ventricular tachycardia, Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome and other cardiac arrhythmias has progressed from an expensive and painful surgical therapy accompanied by a long recovery period to the less expensive, less traumatic transcatheter approach. The feasibility of cardiac ablation, along with the increasing number of physicians using the technique, requires understanding of the anatomic and electrophysiologic bases of transcatheter ablation as well as the different technologies, their limitations and complications. This report provides an overview of the physical, scientific and technical aspects of cardiac ablation performed with the methods currently available and a summary of the limitations of each method and expected future technologic developments in this growing field. Emphasis is placed on radiofrequency and direct current energies, the primary methods now used. Methods such as cryoablation and laser, and microwave and chemical ablation are discussed with less detail because the method of delivering energy for these ablative procedures has not been fully developed.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993
Zalmen Blanck; Mohammad Jazayeri; Anwer Dhala; Sanjay Deshpande; Jasbir Sra; Masood Akhtar
OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to present bundle branch reentry as the mechanism of sustained ventricular tachycardia in the absence of myocardial or valvular dysfunction. BACKGROUND Previous reports have documented the relation between structural heart disease and bundle branch reentrant ventricular tachycardia. Myocardial or valvular dysfunction has thus far been recognized as the only anatomic substrate for the development of this tachycardia. METHODS Three patients with a wide QRS complex tachycardia underwent noninvasive and invasive cardiac evaluation and electrophysiologic studies to identify the substrate and mechanism of tachycardia. Catheter ablation of the right bundle branch using radiofrequency current was performed in each patient. RESULTS The patients were all men (aged 54, 34 and 72 years) who presented with presyncope, palpitation and cardiac arrest, respectively. Electrocardiography during sinus rhythm revealed nonspecific intraventricular conduction delay in all three patients. Cardiac evaluation revealed no evidence of myocardial or valvular dysfunction in any patient. The baseline HV interval was prolonged in each patient (90, 100 and 75 ms, respectively). Programmed right ventricular stimulation initiated bundle branch reentrant tachycardia with typical left (three patients) and right (one patient) bundle branch block pattern. Catheter ablation of the right bundle branch using radiofrequency current abolished bundle branch reentry in all three patients. After 26-, 13- and 8-month follow-up periods, complete right bundle branch block persisted, and all three patients remained asymptomatic without antiarrhythmic drugs. CONCLUSIONS Sustained bundle branch reentry can be a clinical arrhythmia in patients with no identifiable myocardial or valvular dysfunction except for isolated conduction abnormalities in the His-Purkinje system. This mechanism of tachycardia should be recognized during electrophysiologic evaluation, given the seriousness of this arrhythmia and the availability of the effective treatment.
Circulation | 1997
Calambur Narasimhan; Mohammad Jazayeri; Jasbir Sra; Anwer Dhala; Sanjay Deshpande; Michael Biehl; Masood Akhtar; Zalmen Blanck
BACKGROUND The clinical characteristics of sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (SMVT), when it develops after valve surgery, have not been described. METHODS AND RESULTS Between 1985 and 1996, 31 patients (30 men and 1 woman) who had undergone valve surgery were found to have inducible SMVT. Nine patients (29%) had sustained VT due to bundle-branch reentry (BBR) (group 1). Four of these patients had normal left ventricular function, and VT with a right bundle-branch morphology was inducible in 4 patients. Group 2 included 20 patients with inducible myocardial (ie, non-BBR) VT. Coronary artery disease was present in 15 group 2 patients (75%) due to atherosclerotic (n=12) and nonatherosclerotic (n=3) causes. Two patients had both inducible sustained BBR and myocardial VT (group 3). Sustained BBR VT occurred significantly earlier after valve surgery (median, 10 days) than the onset of postoperative myocardial VT (median, 72 months; P<.005). CONCLUSIONS Myocardial VT was the most common type of inducible SMVT in patients with valvular heart disease. The majority of these patients had underlying coronary artery disease and significant left ventricular dysfunction. However, in almost one third of the patients, sustained BBR VT was the only type of inducible SMVT. This type of VT was facilitated by the valve procedure occurring within 4 weeks after surgery in most patients. In these patients, left ventricular function was relatively well preserved, and the right bundle-branch block type of BBR was frequently induced. Because a curative therapy can be offered to these patients (ie, bundle-branch ablation), BBR should be seriously considered as the mechanism of VT in patients with valvular heart disease, particularly if the arrhythmia occurs soon after valve surgery.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1997
Panagiotis T Panotopoulos; Kathi Axtell; Alfred J. Anderson; Jasbir Sra; Zalmen Blanck; Sanjay Deshpande; Michael Biehl; Edward T. Keelan; Mohammad Jazayeri; Masood Akhtar; Anwer Dhala
OBJECTIVES We sought to assess the effect of advanced age on the outcome of patients with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). BACKGROUND ICDs are effective in preventing sudden cardiac death in susceptible patients, but their beneficial effect on survival is attenuated by the high rate of nonsudden cardiac death in those treated. Although advanced age is an important variable in determining cardiovascular mortality, its impact on the outcome of patients with an ICD has been inadequately studied. METHODS We performed multivariate analysis of a data base consisting of 769 consecutive patients with an ICD. Seventy-four patients > or = 75 years old at ICD implantation (Group 1) were compared with the remaining 695 patients (Group 2). RESULTS The two groups were similar in clinical presentation, left ventricular function and gender distribution. The mean follow-up time was 29 and 42 months, respectively, for patients in Group 1 and Group 2. Actuarial survival at 4 years was 57% in Group 1 versus 78% in Group 2 (p = 0.0001). This difference was primarily due to a higher rate of nonsudden cardiac death in Group 1. On multivariate analysis, age > or = 75 years, New York Heart Association functional class III, left ventricular ejection fraction < 30% and appropriate shocks during follow-up were independently associated with increased mortality (odds ratio 3.56, 1.8, 1.6 and 1.39, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Among patients with similar functional class and ejection fraction, the mortality risk is increased threefold in those > or = 75 years old at the time of ICD implantation. Extrapolation of results from younger patients is likely to overestimate ICD benefit in the elderly.
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1995
Andrea Natale; Jasbir Sra; Anwer Dhala; Abdul Wase; Mohammad Jazayeri; Sanjay Deshpande; Zalmen Blanck; Masood Akhtar
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of different therapeutic approaches for patients with a history of syncope and positive head‐up tilt testing. Background: Head‐up tilt testing has gained broad acceptance as a reliable diagnostic method for the assessment of patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. However, once the diagnosis is established, there is no consensus on the most appropriate treatment. In this respect, efficacy of drug therapy in preventing recurrence of symptoms in such patients is not entirely clear, and controversies exist regarding the need to confirm the effects of pharmacological interventions. Methods: Clinical follow‐up was obtained in 303 patients with a history of syncope and positive head‐up tilt testing. After the diagnostic head‐up tilt, patients were assigned to different therapeutic approaches according to their preference or logistic impediments. Of 303 patients, 44 received empiric therapy, 210 were treated with medications proven effective during repeated head‐up tilt testing, and 49 refused or discontinued medical therapy. The three groups were similar with regard to age, sex, and clinical presentation. The mean follow‐up was 2.8 ±1.8 years. Among the patients treated according to head‐up tilt guided therapy, 130 were on beta blockers, 35 on theophylline, 10 on ephedrine, 31 on disopyramide, and 4 on miscellaneous regimens. Empiric treatment consisted of beta blockers in 37 of 44 patients and other drugs in the remaining patients. Results: During the follow‐up, recurrence of symptoms was experienced in 12 (6%) of the 210 patients receiving the head‐up tilt guided therapy, 16 (36%) of 44 in the empiric therapy group, and 33 (67%) of 49 in the no therapy group. Recurrence of symptoms in patients on empiric or no therapy was significantly more frequent as compared to the head‐up tilt guided therapy group (P<0.01). Conclusions: In patients with unexplained syncope and positive upright tilt testing, therapeutic strategies identified on the basis of response during head‐up tilt have a more positive impact on the recurrence of symptoms during follow‐up.
Circulation | 1995
Zalmen Blanck; Anwer Dhala; Jasbir Sra; Sanjay Deshpande; Alfred J. Anderson; Masood Akhtar; Mohammad Jazayeri
BACKGROUND The presence of atrioventricular nodal dual-pathway physiology in patients with atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT) provides an opportunity to characterize the effect of a selective slow-pathway ablation on the ventricular rate during atrial fibrillation (AF). This may have important clinical implications for the nonpharmacological management of AF with a rapid ventricular rate. METHODS AND RESULTS Selective radiofrequency catheter ablation of the atrioventricular nodal slow pathway was performed with a stepwise approach in patients with documented sustained AVNRT. The AV nodal conduction properties and refractoriness and the ventricular rate during induced AF were assessed at baseline and under autonomic blockade before and after a selective slow-pathway ablation in 18 patients (mean age, 34 +/- 8 years). Sustained AVNRT was induced with a mean cycle length of 339 +/- 58 ms. A slow-pathway ablation was successfully achieved with 5 +/- 4 applications of radiofrequency energy. The shortest cycle length of 1:1 AV conduction and the AV nodal effective refractory period significantly prolonged after ablation (367 +/- 53 versus 403 +/- 55 ms, P < .0001, and 258 +/- 55 versus 292 +/- 74 ms, P < .05, respectively). Selective slow-pathway ablation significantly prolonged the mean (526 +/- 93 versus 612 +/- 107 ms, P < .0001), the shortest (378 +/- 59 versus 423 +/- 73 ms, P < .0001), and the longest (826 +/- 150 versus 969 +/- 226 ms, P < .01) cycle lengths of the ventricular response to AF. Significant slowing of the ventricular rate during AF occurred in 13 patients (72%), including all eight patients in whom AV nodal dual-pathway physiology was abolished. Five patients did not have a significant change in the ventricular rate during AF; a persistent dual AV nodal pathway physiology was demonstrable in four of these patients. Loss of dual-pathway physiology after ablation had a sensitivity of 77%, specificity of 80%, and positive predictive value of 91% for slowing the ventricular rate during AF. CONCLUSIONS In patients undergoing a slow-pathway ablation for control of AVNRT, selective slow-pathway ablation may cause a significant decrease in the ventricular rate during AF. These effects are primarily due to the prolongation of AV nodal conduction properties and refractory period of the residual AV nodal transmission system. These findings may have important therapeutic implications for the nonpharmacological treatment of AF, particularly in patients with underlying dual AV nodal physiology.