Heart Rhythm
Volume 2, Issue 12 , Pages 1286-1293, December 2005

Dispersion of repolarization in cardiac resynchronization therapy

Department of Cardiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands

Received 12 May 2005; accepted 25 August 2005. published online 19 September 2005.

Background

Proarrhythmic effects of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) as a result of increased transmural dispersion of repolarization (TDR) induced by left ventricular (LV) epicardial pacing in a subset of vulnerable patients have been reported. The possibility of identifying these patients by ECG repolarization indices has been suggested.

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to test whether repolarization indices on the ECG can be used to measure dispersion of repolarization during pacing.

Methods

CRT devices of 28 heart failure patients were switched among biventricular, LV, and right ventricular (RV) pacing. ECG indices proposed to measure dispersion of repolarization were calculated. The effects of CRT on repolarization were simulated in ECGSIM, a mathematical model of electrocardiogram genesis. TDR was calculated as the difference in repolarization time between the epicardial and endocardial nodes of the heart model.

Results

Patients: The interval from the apex to the end of the T wave was shorter during biventricular pacing (102 ± 18 ms) and LV pacing (106 ± 21 ms) than during RV pacing (117 ± 22 ms, P ≤.005). T-wave amplitude and area were low during biventricular pacing (287 ± 125 μV and 56 ± 22 μV·s, respectively, P = .0006 vs RV pacing). T-wave complexity was high during biventricular pacing (0.42 ± 0.26, P = .004 vs RV pacing). Simulations: Repolarization patterns were highly similar to the preceding depolarization patterns. The repolarization patterns of different pacing modes explained the observed magnitudes of the ECG repolarization indices. Average and local TDR were not different between pacing modes.

Conclusion

In patients treated with CRT, ECG repolarization indices are related to pacing-induced activation sequences rather than transmural dispersion. TDR during biventricular and LV pacing is not larger than TDR during conventional RV endocardial pacing.

Keywords:  Dispersion of repolarization , Resynchronization therapy , Arrhythmogenesis , Electrocardiography , Computer modeling

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 Supported by Grant 2001.177 from the Netherlands Heart Foundation, The Hague.

PII: S1547-5271(05)02024-2

doi:10.1016/j.hrthm.2005.08.031

Heart Rhythm
Volume 2, Issue 12 , Pages 1286-1293, December 2005