Background: Catheter ablation for ventricular arrhythmia (VA) near the distal great cardiac vein (GCV) is often challenging, and data are limited.
Methods and results: Analysis was performed in 30 patients (19 men; age, 52.8±15.5 years) who underwent catheter ablation for focal VA (11 ventricular tachycardia and 19 premature contractions) with early activation in the GCV (36.7±8.0 ms pre-QRS). Angiography in 27 patients showed earliest GCV site within 5 mm of a coronary artery in 20 (74%). Ablation was performed in the GCV in 15 patients and abolished VA in 8. Ablation was attempted at adjacent non-GCV sites in 19 patients and abolished VA in 5 patients (4 from the left ventricular endocardium and 1 from the left coronary cusp); all success had VA with an initial r wave in lead I and activation ≤7 ms after the GCV (GCV-non-GCV interval). In 13 patients, percutaneous epicardial mapping was performed, but because of adjacent coronaries only 2 received radiofrequency application with VA elimination in 1. Surgical cryoablation was performed in 3 patients and abolished VA in 2. Overall acute success was achieved in 16 (53%) patients. After a median of 2.8 months, 13 patients remained free of VA. Major complications occurred in 4 patients, including coronary injury requiring stenting.
Conclusions: Ablation for this arrhythmia is challenging and often limited by the adjacent coronary vessels. Success of anatomically guided endocardial ablation may be identified by a short GCV-non-GCV interval and r wave in lead I.
Keywords: catheter ablation; premature ventricular contraction; ventricular tachycardia.
© 2014 American Heart Association, Inc.