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Incidence and clinical significance of induced ventricular tachycardia
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Incidence and clinical significance of induced ventricular tachycardia

Christine J. Vandepol, Ardeshir Farshidi, Scott R. Spielman, Allan M. Greenspan, Leonard N. Horowitz and Mark E. Josephson
The American journal of cardiology, v 45(4), pp 725-731
1980
PMID: 7361662

Abstract

Five hundred twenty-nine patients were studied with programmed ventricular stimulation for evaluation of supraventricular and ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Eighty-six patients had clinical ventricular tachycardia. Sustained ventricular tachycardia was induced in 52 (91 percent) of the 57 patients with a sustained form of the arrhythmia clinically. Nonsustained ventricular tachycardia was induced in 18 (62 percent) of 29 patients with a symptomatic nonsustained form clinically, in 2 (4 percent) of 57 patients with a sustained form and in 3 (0.7 percent) of the 443 patients with no documented spontaneous ventricular tachycardia. Ventricular tachycardia (sustained or nonsustained) was induced by double right or left ventricular extrastimuli in 47 patients (63 percent) and by single right ventricular extrastimuli in 23 (31 percent); in 5 (7 percent), it was inducible only by rapid ventricular pacing and in 9 (12 percent) only by left ventricular stimulation. All 52 patients with induced sustained ventricular tachycardia had the sustained form clinically. Of the 23 patients with induced nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, 18 (78 percent) had the nonsustained form clinically. Four hundred fifty-four patients had no induced ventricular tachycardia; only 14 (3 percent) of these had the arrhythmia spontaneously. The morphologic features, axis and cycle length of 54 of 62 episodes of induced ventricular tachycardia in 43 patients were similar to those of the clinically observed arrhythmia. It is concluded that ventricular tachycardia resembling the clinical variety can be induced in the laboratory in almost all patients with sustained ventricular tachycardia clinically, in the majority of those with symptomatic nonsustained ventricular tachycardia clinically, and only rarely in patients with no previously documented ventricular tachycardia. Conversely, induction of ventricular tachycardia implies the likelihood of spontaneous episodes of this arrhythmia.

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Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems
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