Arrhythmias Originating in Left Ventricular Papillary Muscles: Clinical Characteristics, Multislice Imaging and Catheter Ablation

pp. 425-433

Authors

  • Santiago Rivera Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Gastón Albina Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Leandro Tomás Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • María de la Paz Ricapito Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Ignacio Mondragón Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Milagros Caro Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Marcelo Reinoso Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Diego Belardi Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Alberto Giniger Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Fernando Scazzuso Instituto Cardiovascular de Buenos Aires (ICBA). Buenos Aires, Argentina.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7775/rac.es.v85.i5.10249

Keywords:

Arrhythmias, cardiac – Cryosurgery - Echocardiography

Abstract

Background: Ventricular arrhythmias can arise from the left ventricular papillary muscles.


Objectives: The aim of this study was to describe the most relevant features of this type of ventricular arrhythmias and to compare outcomes with either cryoenergy or radiofrequency catheter ablation.


Methods: Forty-two patients undergoing catheter ablation for ventricular arrhythmias originating in the left ventricular papillary muscles were included in the study. Mean age was 47±16 years, 70% were men, and median ejection fraction was 55±11%. Ventricular arrhythmias were localized using three-dimensional mapping, multislice computed tomography and intracardiac echocardiography, with arrhythmia foci mapped at either the anterolateral or posteromedial papillary muscles. Ablation was performed using an 8-mm focal cryoablation catheter or a 4mm open-irrigated radiofrequency ablation catheter.


Results: All clinical ventricular arrhythmias exhibited a right bundle branch block pattern, with mean QRS duration of 150±13ms and R>r’ pattern in the left ventricle in 71.4% of cases. Acute success rate was 100% for cryoablation (n=18) and 83% for radiofrequency ablation (n=20) (p=0.06). Ventricular arrhythmia recurrence at 12 months was 4% for cryoablation and 46% for radiofrequency ablation (p=0.02). Use of radiofrequency ablation (HR 0.2; p=0.04) and lack of intracardiac echocardiography (HR 0.1; p=0.01) were associated with higher risk of recurrence.


Conclusions: Right bundle branch block morphology with left ventricular R>r’ pattern and QRS duration >135 milliseconds are the most frequent clinical characteristics of these ventricular arrhythmias Use of cryoablation and intracardiac echocardiography were associated with lower recurrence rates, while radiofrequency ablation was associated with 20% increase of clinical
arrhythmia recurrence after ablation.

Published

2025-06-17

Issue

Section

ORIGINAL ARTICLES

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