This study aims to evaluate the electrophysiological properties of the heart conduction system in patients with (increased risk of) ventricular tachyarrhythmias (VTA) and sudden cardiac arrest, and in a control cohort. The electrophysiological properties will be measured with the relatively new technique ECG-Imaging (ECGI). Moreover, clinical data of subjects will be gathered. By combining the data from the data gathering and the results of ECGI, the investigators hope to increase mechanistic understanding of and risk stratification for VTAs. The investigators aim to be able to identify patients at risk of an arrhythmic event, and aim for better treatment strategies in the future.
ECGI combines electrical body-surface mapping with 256 electrodes placed on the thorax with a CT-scan obtaining the anatomy of the heart and torso, hereby able to reconstruct local electrograms, activation and recovery times. In recent research, ECGI provided numerous extra insights into normal cardiac electrophysiology, but also electrophysiological disorders and disease. The results strongly suggest that ECGI can play a pivotal role in further characterizing arrhythmia mechanisms, therefore could do so for VTAs, leading to diagnosis and treatment improvement. Moreover, ECGI seems to have the potential to detect arrhythmogenic substrate in individuals before their first event, offering the possibility to diagnose and treat patients before sudden cardiac arrest occurs. In the BREACH-ECGI study: ECGI will be used to noninvasively characterize the epicardial electrophysiological substrate and triggers of: * Patients with (increased risk of) VTAs * A control cohort. Results will be evaluated for increased mechanistic understanding and risk stratification. Moreover, clinical data of subjects will be gathered. These data will be analyzed to determine their prognostic value in terms of arrhythmia risk
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
270
A body surface potential mapping and a cardiac + low dose CT-scan
Jessa Hospital
Hasselt, Limburg, Netherlands
Maastricht University Medical Center
Maastricht, Limburg, Netherlands
ECG-Imaging outcome: epicardial potentials
reconstructed epicardial potentials, represented in mV over time(s).
Time frame: 3 years
ECG-Imaging outcome: activation and repolarization maps
Activation and repolarization maps. Acivation and repolarization times are determined from the epicardial potentials, expressed in ms. These are shown on a CT-derived or CMR-derived heart mesh. The entire activation and repolarization of the epicardium of the heart can be visualized this way.
Time frame: 3 years
(Possible) Prognostic risk factors for recurrent ventricular arrhythmias
Possible risk factors, found in the clinical data collection, expressed as odds/hazard ratio.
Time frame: 6 years
Recurrence of ventricular arrhythmias
Documentation over the period of follow-up, if subjects had a recurrence of ventricular arrythmia(s), presented as number of events over a time period.
Time frame: 6 years
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