T he left ventricular (LV) summit is the most common site of idiopathic epicardial LV arrhythmias and frequently represents a diagnostic and a therapeutic challenge. 1 We present a case of sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (SMVT) originating at the LV summit that underwent failed cryosurgical epicardial ablation and was successfully treated with the aid of merged hemodynamic and contrast-enhanced MRI (CE-MRI).
Editor's Perspective see p e85Case A 67-year-old man was admitted in 2010 for heart failure with severe LV dysfunction (ejection fraction 20%) initially attributed to alcohol consumption, and during the diagnostic work-up, a severe lesion at the bifurcation of the proximal left anterior descending artery with the first diagonal was percutaneously revascularized using a bifurcated drug-eluting stent, and he was discharged with the diagnosis of dilated cardiomyopathy of mixed pathogenesis (alcoholic and ischemic). In April 2011, he presented with SMVT with left-bundle branch block morphology. He underwent CE-MRI followed by an electrophysiologic study using an endocardial LV retrograde access, where frequent premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) with similar morphology to the clinical VT were ablated at the mitroaortic continuity, with partial success (ie, reduction in PVC density). The patient underwent implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) insertion and was discharged on amiodarone treatment. He remained free of arrhythmias until September 2012, when he was readmitted for a SMVT with left-bundle branch block morphology, right inferior axis at 140 beats per minute (below ICD detection rate), and early precordial transition (Figure 1). At the time of the EP study, SMVT was not inducible with programmed stimulation during isoproterenol infusion, but the patient presented frequent PVCs with identical morphology to the clinical VT (Figure 2C). A combined endoepicardial electroanatomical mapping (NaviStar ThermoCool, 3.5-mm tip, 2-5-2 interelectrode distance, and Carto XP Navigation System; Biosense Webster, Inc, Diamond Bar, CA) followed by coronary angiography revealed the presence of a low-voltage (<1 mV) area at the epicardium of the superior LV aspect that during sinus rhythm was characterized by the presence of fragmented and late electrograms ( Figure 2B), whereas the endocardial voltage and the electrogram characteristics of both outflow tracts were normal. Endocardial activation mapping of PVCs showed late activation in the right and LV outflow tracts ( Figure 2A) and no QRS match with pace mapping. In contrast, activation mapping showed an earliest site at the epicardium, where an excellent pace mapping was obtained ( Figure 2B and 2C). Because of the close proximity (≈1 cm) of the left main arteries, a surgical epicardial approach using cryoenergy was indicated.2,3 The patient had constant ventricular bigeminy during the surgical procedure. Intraoperative electroanatomic epicardial mapping (NavX system; St Jude Medical, Minneapolis, MN) confirmed the observations of the percutan...