Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine (21 page)

BOOK: Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine
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• All beats look similar; predominantly upward in V
1
= RBBB-type vs. downward = LBBB-type
• In structurally
abnormal
heart:
prior MI
(scar);
CMP
;
myocarditis
;
arrhythmogenic RV CMP (ARVC)
: incomplete RBBB,
ε wave (terminal notch in QRS) & TWI in V
1
–V
3
on resting ECG, LBBB-type VT, dx w/ MRI (
Lancet
2009;373:1289)
• In structurally
normal
heart (w/ normal resting ECG):
RVOT VT
: LBBB-type VT w/ inferior axis; typically ablate
idiopathic LV VT
: RBBB-type VT w/ superior axis; responds to verapamil

Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (PMVT)

• QRS morphology changes from beat to beat • Etiologies:
ischemia
;
CMP
; catecholaminergic;
torsades de pointes
(TdP = “twisting of the points,” PMVT + ↑ QT): ↑ QT
acquired
(meds, lytes, stroke, see "ECG") w/ risk ↑ w/ ↓ HR, freq PVCs (pause dependent)
or
congenital
(K/Na channelopathies) w/ resting Tw abnl & TdP triggered by sympathetic stimulation (eg, exercise, emotion, sudden loud noises) (
Lancet
2008;372:750).
Brugada syndrome
(Na channelopathy):
>
; pseudo-RBBB w/ STE in V
1
–V
3
(provoked w/ class IA or IC) on resting ECG

Diagnostic clues that favor VT (assume until proven o/w)


Prior MI
,
CHF
or
LV dysfunction
best predictors
that WCT is VT (
Am J Med
1998;84:53) • Hemodynamics and rate do
not
reliably distinguish VT from SVT
• MMVT is regular, but initially it may be slightly irregular, mimicking AF w/ aberrancy;
grossly
irregularly irregular rhythm suggests AF w/ aberrancy • ECG features that favor VT (
Circ
1991;83:1649)
AV dissociation
(independent P waves, capture or fusion beats) proves VT
very wide QRS
(>140 ms in RBBB-type or >160 in LBBB-type);
extreme axis deviation
QRS morphology atypical for BBB
RBBB-type: absence of tall R′ (or presence of monophasic R) in V
1
, r/S ratio <1 in V
6
LBBB-type: onset to nadir >60–100 ms in V
1
, q wave in V
6
concordance
(QRS in all precordial leads w/ same pattern/direction)

Long-term management ( 
JACC
2006;48:1064)

• Workup:
echo
to ✓ LV fxn,
cath
or
stress test
to r/o ischemia, ? MRI and/or RV bx to
look for infiltrative CMP or ARVC, ?
EP study
to assess inducibility

ICD
: 2° prevention after documented VT/VF arrest (unless due to reversible cause)
1° prev. if high risk, eg, EF <30–35%, ARVC, Brugada, certain LQTS, severe HCMP. See “Intracardiac Devices.” ? Wearable vest if revers. etiol. waiting for ICD (
Circ
2013;127:854).
Antitachycardia pacing (ATP = burst pacing faster than VT) can terminate VT w/o shock

Meds
: bB, antiarrhythmics (eg, amio, mexiletine) to suppress VT which could trigger shock • If med a/w TdP → QT >500 ± VPBs: d/c med, replete K, give Mg, ± pacing (
JACC
2010;55:934) •
Radiofrequency ablation
if isolated VT focus or if recurrent VT triggering ICD firing; ablation before ICD implantation ↓ discharge rate by 40% (
Lancet
2010;375:31)
ATRIAL FIBRILLATION

Classification (
Circ
2006;114:e257 & 2011;123:104)


Paroxysmal
(self-terminating, usually <48 h) vs.
persistent
(sustained >7 d or terminated after Rx) vs.
permanent
(typically >1 y and when cardioversion has failed or is foregone) •
Valvular
(rheumatic MV disease, prosthetic valve or valve repair) vs.
nonvalvular

Lone AF
= age <60 y and w/o clinical or echo evidence of cardiac disease (including HTN)
Epidemiology and etiologies (
Annals
2008;149:ITC5-2)
• 1–2% of pop. has AF (8% of elderly); lifetime risk 25%; mean age at presentation ~75 y • Acute (up to 50% w/o identifiable cause)
Cardiac
: HF, myo/pericarditis, ischemia/MI, hypertensive crisis, cardiac surgery
Pulmonary
: acute pulmonary disease or hypoxia (eg, COPD flare, PNA), PE, OSA
Metabolic
: high catecholamine states (stress, infection, postop, pheo), thyrotoxicosis
Drugs
: alcohol (“holiday heart”), cocaine, amphetamines, theophylline, caffeine
Neurogenic
: subarachnoid hemorrhage, ischemic stroke
• Chronic: ↑ age, HTN, ischemia, valve dis. (MV, TV, AoV), CMP, hyperthyroidism, obesity
Evaluation
• H&P, ECG, CXR, TTE (LA size, thrombus, valves, LV fxn, pericardium), K, Mg, FOBT before anticoag, TFTs; r/o MI not necessary unless other ischemic sx
Figure 1-5 
Approach to acute AF
(Adapted from
NEJM
2004;351:2408;
JACC
2006;48:e149)

Strategies for recurrent AF (
Circ
2011;123:104;
Lancet
2012;379:648)


Rate control
: goal HR <110 at rest if EF >40% and asx (
NEJM
2010;362:1363)
AV node ablation + PPM as a last resort (
NEJM
2001;344:1043; 2002;346:2062)

Rhythm control
: no clear survival benefit vs. rate cntl (
NEJM
2002;347:1825 & 2008;358:2667)
Consider if
sx
w/ rate cntl, difficult to cntl rate, ? unable to anticoag, ? benefit in CRT

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