Purpose: To assess the relationship between late potentials and spontaneous ventricular arrhythmias, organic heart disease, inducibility of arrhythmias at electrophysiological study and ejection fraction.
Methods: The population is comprised by 52 patients (41 men, 11 women with mean age 50 +/- 16 years) with spontaneous clinically documented ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation. An electrophysiological study was performed with conventional programmed stimulation. Within a week of the test a study of late potentials was also performed.
Results: Late potentials were documented in 73% of the patients with ventricular tachycardia and only in 17% of the patients with ventricular fibrillation. Sixty-eight percent of the patients with ischemic cardiopathy presented late potentials and in these, ventricular tachycardia was inducible in 93%. Only one from a group of 7 patients with ventricular arrhythmias and no organic heart disease, presented late potentials. In patients with late potentials, 84% have inducible ventricular tachycardia, but only 26% of patients without late potentials have inducible ventricular tachycardia. The incidence of late potentials was inversely correlated with left ventricular ejection fraction.
Conclusion: The presence of late potentials was more frequent in patients with ventricular tachycardia than in patients with ventricular fibrillation. The presence of late potentials has a sensibility of 81.5% and a specificity of 78% to detect patients with inducible ventricular tachycardia.