0521779407-22 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:23
Ventricular Tachycardia 1529
Signs & Symptoms
■Depending on co-existing cardiac conditions and rate of ventricular
response: Dizziness, hypotension, shortness of breath, near syncope
and syncope, exacerbation of CHF and angina
tests
■Basic Tests
➣12-lead ECG:
➣Regular wide QRS complexes tachycardia. No 1:1 P-QRS relation-
ship
➣Brugada criteria:
Rs complex in all precordial leads (100% specific for VT)
Beginning of R to nadir of S interval >100 ms in any precordial
lead (98%)
➣A-V dissociation (98%)
➣RBBB QRS: V1: predominantly positive in (R, qR or Rs); V6: QS,
qRs or R/S <1
➣LBBB QRS: V1: R wave width >30 ms, notched downstroke of the
S wave, onset of QRS to nadir of the S wave >60 ms; V6: QR, QS,
QrS or Rr’
➣Other diagnostic features: fusion or capture QRS during VT, pres-
ence of Q waves during tachycardia
➣Special Cases:
Idiopathic left ventricular tachycardia: RBBB with R/S < 1 in
V5 and V6; mostly superior QRS axis
Idiopathic right ventricular outflow tachycardia: LBBB with
inferior QRS axis
Brugada Syndrome: elevated J wave in V1 to V2 (baseline ECG)
Right ventricular dysplasia: epsilon wave in V1 to V2, inverted
T wave in V1 to V3, isolated increase in QRS (110 ms) in V1 to
V2 (baseline ECG)
■Specific Diagnostic Test
➣Electrophysiology study for induction and mapping of VT, to
diagnose bundle branch block and fascicular re-entrant VT
➣Genotyping of congenital long QT-syndrome and arrhythmo-
genic right ventricular dysplasia (generally not required for clin-
ical practice)
differential diagnosis
■SVT with aberrantly conducted QRS complexes or SVT from WPW
syndrome