• Heart Rhythm · Aug 2006

    Refractory ventricular tachycardia secondary to cardiac sarcoid: electrophysiologic characteristics, mapping, and ablation.

    • Bruce A Koplan, Kyoko Soejima, Kenneth Baughman, Laurence M Epstein, and William G Stevenson.
    • Cardiac Arrhythmia Service, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. bkoplan@partners.org
    • Heart Rhythm. 2006 Aug 1;3(8):924-9.

    BackgroundCardiac sarcoidosis is a recognized cause of ventricular tachycardia (VT) and sudden death that has not been well studied.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to describe the clinical characteristics of a consecutive series of eight patients with recurrent monomorphic VT due to cardiac sarcoidosis and to define the electrophysiologic characteristics of the VT and its electrophysiologic substrate.Methods/ResultsOf 98 patents with nonischemic cardiomyopathy and VT referred for ablation over a 7-year period, sarcoid was the etiology in 8%. Mean age was 42 +/- 8 years, and all but one patient had a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (mean 34% +/- 15%). VT was the initial manifestation of sarcoid disease in 5 of 8 cases based on retrospective analysis. All patients had not responded to therapy with multiple antiarrhythmic drugs (mean 2.5 +/- 1). Cardiac biopsy initially was negative in 3 of 7 patients, and in 2 patients the diagnosis was not made until posttransplant examination of the heart. Two patients (25%) had a previous presumptive diagnosis of arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia. Electrophysiologic study revealed evidence of scar-related reentry with multiple monomorphic VTs induced (4 +/- 2 VTs per patient) with both right bundle branch block and left bundle branch block QRS configurations. Areas of low-voltage scar were present in the right ventricle in all 8 of 8 patients, in the left ventricle in 5 (63%) of 8 patients, and in the epicardium in 2 patients undergoing epicardial mapping. Ablation abolished one or more VTs in 6 (75%) of 8 patients, but other VTs remained inducible in all but one patient. Postablation, some form of sustained VT recurred in 6 of 8 patients within 6 months. However, at longer follow-up (range 6 months to 7 years), 4 of 8 patients currently are free of VT with antiarrhythmic drugs and immunosuppression. Cardiac transplantation eventually was required in 5 of 8 patients because of either recurrent VT (n = 4) or heart failure (n = 1).ConclusionSarcoid is an important diagnostic consideration in scar-related VT. Sarcoid can be misdiagnosed as idiopathic or arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. Arrhythmia control can be difficult, although ablation can be helpful in some patients.

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