VT Flashcards
Definition?
Constant rapid ventricular contraction rates, can be sustained or non-sustained. Sustained VT is a ventricular rhythm faster than 100 bpm lasting 30 secs or needing to be terminated earlier due to haemodynamic instability.
RF?
- CAD
- AMI
- LV systolic dysfunction
- Hypertropic cardiomyopathy
- Long/short QT syndrome
- Brugada syndrome
- Ventricular pre-excitation
- Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy
- Electrolyte imbalance
- Drug toxicity
- Chagas disease/cardiomyopathies
ddx?
- SVT aberrancy-doesn’t meet criteria of VT
- SVT with pre-excitation-“
- Electrical artefact-motion or tremor
- Sepsis-sinus rhythm and cultures
- Panic-sinus rhythm and A/D scores high
- Hyperthyroidism-snus rhythm or AF-raised TSH and low TSH
- Acute haemorrhage-sinus, bleeding
- Pheochromocytoma-high adrenaline, sinus tachy, evidence of tumour or high steroid hormones
- Pericarditis-concave up ST elevation and PR depression and CXR/echo findings
- Caffeine-sinus tachy
EPIDEMIOLOGY?
Age: Elderly
Sex: Male
Ethnicity:
Aetiology?
- Cardiac scars
- Conduction disorders
- Drugs
- Long QT syndrome
- Congenital long-QT syndrome
- Acquired long QT syndrome
- Drugs
- Antiarrhythmics
- Electrolyte imbalances
CP?
- Asymptomatic if non-sustained
- Palpitations
- Hypotension
- Syncope
- Chest pain/pressure
- Cardiogenic shock
- Loss of consciousness
- Progression to VF
- Sudden cardiac failure
Pathophysiology?
- Monomorphic VT
- Re-entry circuit
- Polymorphic VT-abnormal ventricular repolarisation
- Decreased cardiac output-non-synchronised rhythm leads to less blood flow into ventricles hence low cardiac outputs causing haemodynamic compromise and so signs of this show
Investigations?
- ECG-
- wide complex tachycardia (QRS 120 milliseconds or greater) at a rate of 100 bpm or greater; may show presence of atrioventricular dissociation,
- previous myocardial infarction;
- QRS duration: >140 milliseconds with right bundle branch block morphology, or
- QRS duration >160 milliseconds with left bundle branch block morphology (this does not apply to patients on anti-arrhythmic drugs);
- right superior axis or left bundle branch block morphology and any right axis;
- baseline ECG may demonstrate QT interval prolongation or evidence of Brugada syndrome or arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy
- Electrolytes-hypokalaemia and hypomagnesaemia
- Troponin I
- CK-MB
Management all?
- Cardioversion
* Anti-arrhythmics-amiodarone
management torades de pointes?
- IV mg sulphate and correct electrolyte imbalances
- Isoprenaline infusion
- Temp/permanent pacing
management catecholamines?
• Beta-blockers
• Implantable cardioverter defib
Catheter ablation
Non-sustained?
• Electrolyte imbalances correction
• Catheter ablation
ICD
Prognosis?
• Idiopathic-good-should be evaluated carefully or can be ablated to be cured
• Non-idiopathic-high risk of death if left untreated
Heart disease adversely affects prognosis
Complications?
• Malfunction of implantable cardioverter defibrillator system malfunction • V fib • Sudden cardiac death • Infection • Cardiomyopathy Amiodarone-thyroid dysfunction