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  • Title: Histopathologic factors conducive to experimental ventricular tachycardia.
    Author: Wetstein L, Mark R, Kaplinsky E, Mitamura H, Kaplan A, Sauermelch C, Michelson EL.
    Journal: Surgery; 1985 Sep; 98(3):532-9. PubMed ID: 4035573.
    Abstract:
    Ventricular tachyarrhythmia is the leading cause of sudden cardiac death. Determination of the substrates conducive to the initiation of this arrhythmia remains an important clinical goal. The purpose of this study was to correlate histopathologic findings, specifically: pattern (heterogeneous versus homogeneous infarct morphology), distribution (viable epicardial and/or endocardial rim), and infarct size, with susceptibility to the initiation of sustained ventricular tachycardia employing programmed electrical stimulation in two canine models of experimental myocardial infarction. Twenty-one adult dogs were randomly divided into two groups: 12 dogs underwent two-stage, 2-hour occlusion of the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery and nine animals underwent permanent, complete occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery with latex embolization. With programmed ventricular pacing with two premature ventricular extrastimuli, initiation of ventricular tachycardia was attempted, open chest, two weeks after infarction. Electrophysiologic evaluation of the infarct type correlated significantly with the histologic morphology of the infarction (p less than 0.001). The presence of a viable epicardial rim was an extremely important variable for ability to induce sustained ventricular tachycardia (p = 0.04). The presence of an endocardial rim was not significant (p = 1.0). Infarct size alone was only marginally related to ventricular tachycardia inducibility (p = 0.08). Nonuniform infarcts were more conducive to the initiation of sustained ventricular tachycardia than were homogeneous infarcts (p = 0.025). The presence of a large, nonuniform infarct correlated best with inducibility (p = 0.0002). Thus in these experimental models, specific infarct morphologies correlate significantly with susceptibility to inducible sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmias.
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