Can transventricular intracardiac impedance measurement discriminate haemodynamically unstable ventricular arrhythmias in human?
AIMS: To measure changes in transventricular impedance during arrhythmias. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients were studied during electrophysiological studies. A quadrapolar catheter was positioned at the right ventricular apex (RVA) and a decapolar catheter within the coronary sinus (CS). Transventricular impedance was measured by injecting a subthreshold biphasic rectangular pulse of 600 micro A between poles 1 of the CS catheter and pole 1 of the RVA catheter and the voltage measured between CS pole 10 and RVA catheter pole 4. Stroke impedance (SZ), surface ECG, intracardiac electrogram (IEGM), and invasive femoral artery blood pressure (FAP) were recorded. Twenty-eight patients were analysed, 5 with inducible, haemodynamically unstable ventricular tachycardia (VT) (HUSVT), 5 with stable VT (HSVT). During HUSVT, the SZ value reduced to 22% (range 0.15-0.32 P < 0.001) in comparison with sinus rhythm. For HSVT, the SZ value reduced to 58% (range 0.33-0.88) P < 0.01, significantly different