Journal of Arrhythmia (Jun 2022)
Short‐time ventricular tachycardia ablation for cardiac sarcoidosis using coherent map
Abstract
Abstract A 69‐year‐old woman with isolated cardiac sarcoidosis was hospitalized for frequent appropriate implantable converter defibrillator therapies for ventricular tachycardia (VT) despite of favorably controlled condition with oral prednisolone. The patient underwent urgent catheter ablation with CARTO 3D mapping system. Although the voltage map, activation map, and propagation map during VT could not visualize the tachycardia circuit, the coherent map clarified entrance and exit sites of the tachycardia circuit with slow or nonconducting (SNO) zones, which seemed like a figure‐of‐eight circuit. Considering the risk of VT termination or acceleration to rapid unstable VT, neither entrainment nor pacing studies were performed. The VT was terminated near the exit site of the isthmus where tiny pre‐systolic potential was detected. Any diastolic potentials could not be detected. This meant that the critical isthmus might be located at the epicardium or deep incite of the left‐ventricular myocardium where the coherent map showed as SNO zones. We should recognize coherent map as artificial that may represent VT circuit as if complete endocardial reentry even if not. The procedural time from mapping to termination of VT was only 22 minutes. The patient has been free from any cardiovascular events after the procedure. Coherent map might be feasible for revealing the critical isthmus of hemodynamically stable VTs without using electrophysiological techniques, including entrainment, pacing study, and voltage map during own beats, and would enable us to achieve successful VT ablation in a short time.
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