Title: Forty Years of Invasive Clinical Electrophysiology
Abstract: HomeCirculation: Arrhythmia and ElectrophysiologyVol. 1, No. 1Forty Years of Invasive Clinical Electrophysiology Free AccessResearch ArticlePDF/EPUBAboutView PDFView EPUBSections ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload citationsTrack citationsPermissions ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyReddit Jump toFree AccessResearch ArticlePDF/EPUBForty Years of Invasive Clinical Electrophysiology1967–2007 Hein J. Wellens, MD Hein J. WellensHein J. Wellens From the Cardiovascular Research Center Maastricht, Maastricht, the Netherlands. Originally published1 Apr 2008https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCEP.108.770529Circulation: Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology. 2008;1:49–53In 2007, we marked the 40th anniversary of the birth of invasive clinical electrophysiology. Of course, before 1967, cardiac arrhythmias were documented electrocardiographically, and their possible mechanisms were analyzed ingeniously and explained beautifully by giants such as Katz and Pick,1 Scherf and Schott,2 and Bellet.3In the 1940s and 1950s, Hecht,4 Latour and Puech,5 and Giraud et al6 used catheters to measure intracardiac electric activity and to record the sequence of cardiac activation. In 1958, Furman and Robinson7 showed that in patients with atrioventricular block, the heart could be stimulated by connecting an intraventricular catheter to a stimulator.The Early YearsIn 1967, the analysis of the site of origin and mechanism of cardiac arrhythmias became possible in the intact human heart through the use of programmed electric stimulation combined with intracardiac activation mapping. Independently, Durrer et al7 in Amsterdam (in patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome) and Coumel and coworkers8 in Paris (in a patient with an atrioventricular junctional tachycardia) showed that by connecting intracardiac catheters to a versatile stimulator, it was possible to reproducibly initiate and terminate clinically occurring tachycardias and to identify the site of origin of the tachycardia and, in the case of a reentrant mechanism, the pathway of the arrhythmia by placing catheters at different sites in the heart.8,9 Soon after, on both sides of the Atlantic, this technique was used to unravel the place of origin of different types of supraventricular tachycardias.10–14 The first book on the use of programmed stimulation of the heart in the analysis of supraventricular tachycardias was published in 1971.15In the late 1960s, Scherlag et al16 made another important breakthrough in the analysis of cardiac arrhythmias with the reproducible registration of the His bundle electrogram. Not only did this advance allow accurate localization and risk stratification of atrioventricular conduction disturbances, but, as shown by groups led by Ken Rosen, Onkar Narula, and Paul Puech, much better identification of the path for impulse propagation during a tachycardia was now possible.17A very exciting aspect of the use of programmed electric stimulation of the heart, when combined with recording the His bundle electrogram, was the progress made in the interpretation of the 12-lead ECG during cardiac arrhythmias. Careful reexamination of the ECG after an intracardiac study brought new insights, ultimately leading to a clinically useful classification of tachycardias and allowing correct recognition of different types of arrhythmias from the 12-lead ECG.18Although initially considered dangerous, the reproducible initiation and termination of wide QRS tachycardias by programmed electric stimulation of the heart19 introduced new ways to study ventricular arrhythmias in the intact human heart. Those invasive studies made it possible to validate and expand earlier observations by Sandler and Marriott20 of the ECG patterns of the different kinds of wide QRS tachycardias. Better identification of the ECG characteristics of ventricular tachycardias was now possible, an advance of obvious importance for making the correct diagnosis and managing the patient.21New TherapiesAs shown in the Table, the possibility of localizing the site of origin or the pathway of a tachycardia and being informed about the tachycardia mechanism was followed by the development of new therapies. One of the first was arrhythmia surgery, started, not surprisingly, in patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome by a group at Duke University. Both Gallagher (cardiology) and Sealy and Cox (surgery) played major roles in advancing our understanding of the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome and in the development of surgical therapy.22,23 The contributions of cardiac surgeons, including Sealy, Guiraudon, Cox and Harken, have been of great importance not only for treating cardiac arrhythmias but also in advancing the understanding of arrhythmia mechanisms.24Table. Development of New TherapiesArrhythmia surgeryAntiarrhythmic drug therapiesAntitachycardia pacingImplantable defibrillatorCatheter ablationResynchronization of cardiac activationBetter knowledge of cardiac anatomy became a must for the invasive electrophysiologist. The pathologists Becker and Anderson25 made us aware that insights into cardiac anatomy are essential to "cure" cardiac arrhythmias and to avoid cardiac damage.Thanks to Guiraudon and Fontaine and the work of Josephson and coworkers,26,27 surgical therapy became possible in patients with ventricular tachycardia. Accurate localization of the area of abnormal impulse formation followed by excision of that area cured the arrhythmia. Cox et al28 showed that atrial fibrillation (AF) could be controlled surgically by making several incisions in the atria, thereby inhibiting the development of multiple reentry circuits responsible for AF.Another logical consequence of the ability to reproducibly initiate and terminate tachycardias in the human heart was the use of these methods to evaluate the effect of pharmacological interventions on tachycardia mechanisms, obviously with the hope that such information would be helpful in the selection of the best pharmacological approach to terminate and prevent cardiac arrhythmias. It was shown that prevention of tachycardia induction by programmed stimulation was useful in patients with a single reentrant pathway with well-defined electrophysiological properties but not in patients with a complex arrhythmia substrate such as a scar after myocardial infarction. The extent of cardiac damage and the degree of functional impairment had an inverse relationship with the ability to prevent arrhythmia recurrences. In fact, as shown by the Cardiac Arrhythmia Suppression Trial (CAST) investigators,29 in damaged hearts, antiarrhythmic drugs administered preventively could kill more people than they save.Shortly after the demonstration that reentrant arrhythmias could be terminated by critically timed stimuli, that principle was applied to therapy. Initially, it was implemented in implanted pacemakers with continuous pacing at a rate below the tachycardia rate until an appropriately timed pacing stimulus created refractoriness for the circulating impulse in the tachycardia circuit, so-called underdrive pacing.30 Thereafter, increasingly sophisticated devices were developed with algorithms for terminating and preventing tachycardia.A very important advance in rescuing patients with life-threatening arrhythmias was the implantable automatic defibrillator pioneered by Mirowski et al.31 Major advances in technology resulting in increasing effectiveness have led to widespread acceptance of the device.32The wish to interrupt conduction pathways and to destroy sites of abnormal impulse formation nonsurgically led to the application of ablative energy with intracardiac catheters. Originally, high-energy shocks were given to interrupt conduction in the His bundle,33,34 in the accessory atrioventricular pathway,35 in the circuit of atrial flutter,36 and at the site of origin or pathway of ventricular tachycardias.37–39 Borggrefe et al40 were the first to interrupt conduction in an accessory atrioventricular pathway using radiofrequency current. Use of that energy source to cure arrhythmias was reported later in a large series of patients with supraventricular tachycardias.41–43 In addition, on the basis of information from intracardiac activation mapping and response to pacing,44 it became possible to use radiofrequency catheter ablation successfully in patients with ventricular tachycardia.45Recent YearsDuring the past decade, invasive electrophysiology brought important advances in areas such as the management of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias, AF, and heart failure.Despite extensive efforts to better identify people dying an arrhythmic death out of hospital, we are able to recognize only ≈10% of those victims as being at high risk before the event.46,47 Identification is not difficult in patients who have been resuscitated from circulatory arrest or who suffer from a poorly tolerated ventricular arrhythmia.48–50 These patients in the so-called "secondary prevention" category benefit from an implantable defibrillator, although the price per life-year saved may be high.51Despite a wide array of tests, correct assessment of the level of risk remains difficult in patients with poor left ventricular function, with or without nonsustained ventricular arrhythmias, and with coronary or noncoronary heart disease.52–55 Although general guidelines have been published concerning cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) implantation for primary prevention in coronary and noncoronary high-risk patients, we still need to fine tune the risk stratification process to limit costs and to spare people from inappropriate ICD discharges. The suggestion that ICD shocks may accelerate the progression of heart failure56,57 led to an increasing use of antitachycardia pacing to terminate ventricular tachycardia.The use of ablative procedures incorporating intracardiac catheters has grown considerably in recent years. Indications for (curative) radiofrequency catheter ablation have expanded from the classic patients with accessory pathways, atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia, atrial tachycardia, atrial flutter, and ventricular tachycardia to those with arrhythmias in complex congenital heart disease and AF.58–60 Recognition of the role of impulse formation in and around the pulmonary veins in the genesis of paroxysmal AF led to ablative approaches in that area guided by the use of evolving techniques for appropriate catheter placement. Short-term results are satisfactory in patients with paroxysmal AF. Outcomes are less clear in persistent and permanent AF. Long-term results (≥4 years) are not yet available. Complex changes (structural, functional, electric, metabolic, and neurohumoral remodeling) occur after the onset of AF related to the duration of the arrhythmia. More information is needed about the severity and reversibility of these changes in the individual patient to allow the correct selection of AF patients who benefit in the long term from an ablative procedure.In the catheterization laboratory, we also learned that cardiac arrhythmias may have their origin outside the heart, being connected by a muscle bridge to the atrium or ventricle. Those sites of ectopic impulse formation can be found not only in pulmonary veins but also in the superior and inferior caval veins, around the coronary sinus, around the ligament of Marshal, and in the root of the aorta and pulmonary artery. The ECG recognition of an epicardial origin of ventricular tachycardia became possible, leading to successful epicardial catheter ablation.61–63 In addition, it became possible to ablate unmappable and hemodynamically unstable ventricular tachycardia and to ablate triggers of ventricular fibrillation.64Another important development has been the use of pacing in heart failure patients with intraventricular and/or interventricular conduction disturbances. Resynchronization of ventricular activation by permanent pacing with transvenous leads inserted into the coronary veins65 resulted in improvements in exercise tolerance, well-being, and ventricular performance and decreases in hospitalizations, neurohumoral activity, and death66,67 for 70% of selected patients.The FutureCardiac arrhythmias will continue to be present in the coming years. Nevertheless, new developments will allow us to control them better and possibly cure them in an increasing number of patients. Use of device therapy will increase. We hope that we will be able to better select the ICD and resynchronization candidate. Methods will be developed to reduce the number of appropriate and inappropriate ICD shocks by measures such as prophylactic substrate-based catheter ablation for secondary prevention in patients with myocardial infarction.68 In addition, new antiarrhythmic drugs will be introduced to diminish the number of shocks and to facilitate termination of ventricular tachycardia by pacing.69 A better understanding of the arrhythmia mechanisms in the different types of AF and long-term follow-up in these patients will lead to better selection of AF patients who can be treated successfully by catheter ablation. Improvements in catheter design, hybrid imaging, and use of energy sources other than radiofrequency should improve results and diminish complications. The electrophysiological effects of new atrium-specific antiarrhythmics will be tested in the intact human heart.Cell transplantation to replace damaged or lost myocardial cells will be an area of increasing activity. So far, stem cell therapy has not been reported to induce cardiac arrhythmias, but insufficient information is available about the ability of transplanted cells to couple electromechanically among themselves and with host cardiomyocytes.70 The invasive electrophysiologist should play an important role in answering questions about impulse formation, conductivity, and possible arrhythmogenicity after cell transplantation.Our knowledge of genetic arrhythmogenic syndromes will grow. Further studies on the value of the ECG phenotypes for diagnosis and risk stratification are needed. Because we are far from implementing gene therapy, we need better information from basic electrophysiology, about arrhythmia mechanisms. Better knowledge of arrhythmia mechanisms will lead to appropriate pharmacological interventions and possibly to catheter intervention at the site of the initiating ectopic arrhythmic event or tachycardia pathway, which seems even more promising than pharmacological therapy.ConclusionsDuring the past 40 years, important progress has been made in the diagnosis and treatment of cardiac arrhythmias. The present review has looked at the role of the invasive clinical electrophysiologist in the past and present. We still have a long way to go. Despite many advances, we can offer a cure or adequate protection in the event of a cardiac arrhythmia for only a minority of our patients. This concern especially holds for the prevention of sudden arrhythmic death. New developments are needed to bring us better results in the future.DisclosuresNone.FootnotesCorrespondence to Hein J. 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J Am Coll Cardiol. 2003; 42: 2070–2072.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar Previous Back to top Next FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsCited By Fischman D, Vidovich M and Bates E (2022) Recognition and Management of Complications in Cutting-Edge Contemporary Care, JACC: Case Reports, 10.1016/j.jaccas.2022.03.012, 4:8, (505-506), Online publication date: 1-Apr-2022. Ladejobi A and Asirvatham S (2020) Redefining the electroanatomy of the cardiac conduction system, Heart Rhythm, 10.1016/j.hrthm.2019.08.021, 17:1, (131-132), Online publication date: 1-Jan-2020. Hoffman J, Trivedi A and Arora R (2020) Gene and cell based therapies for the prevention and treatment of supraventricular arrhythmias Emerging Technologies for Heart Diseases, 10.1016/B978-0-12-813704-8.00034-6, (761-780), . 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April 2008Vol 1, Issue 1 Advertisement Article InformationMetrics https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCEP.108.770529PMID: 19808393 Originally publishedApril 1, 2008 KeywordstachycardiaarrhythmiaelectrophysiologyPDF download Advertisement SubjectsElectrophysiology