ABSTRACT
Twenty-two consecutive patients underwent elective map-guided extensive endocardial resection (EER) for recurrent ventricular tachyarrhythmias (VT) of whom 20 were male. The ages ranged from 43 to 74 years (mean 57). All arrhythmias were ischaemic in origin. The mean ejection fraction was 29%. The presenting arrhythmias were ventricular tachycardia in 14, ventricular fibrillation (VF) alone in 1 and ventricular tachycardia and VF in 7. Useful additional intraoperative mapping was obtained in 19 patients. Under cardioplegic arrest, the scarred left (22) and where indicated right (4) ventricular endocardium was extensively resected. Resection of scarred papillary muscles was avoided and where indicated, localised cryoablation was performed: 21/22 had concomitant aneurysmectomy and/or coronary artery bypass grafting. There was 1 (4.5%) operative death. All survivors (95.5%) underwent postoperative electrophysiological studies at around 1 week. None had inducible arrhythmias. There were 3 (13.5%) late cardiac deaths, all due to primary cardiac failure without recurrence of arrhythmia. Of 17 (77%) long-term survivors, 16 (94%) are VT-free on no anti-arrhythmic medication at a mean follow-up of 37.2 months. One developed a new arrhythmia at 1 year which is controlled on medication. EER offers a high rate of success in ablating VT in association with a low operative mortality and good prospect of VT-free long-term survival.