Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in patients with no overt heart disease: electrophysiologic observations and clinical outcome.

1988 
: Electrophysiologic studies were performed in nine survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest who had no overt heart disease on clinical, hemodynamic and angiographic evaluation. Cardiac arrest occurred during sedentary activity in seven patients and during exercise in two; no patient was on antiarrhythmic drugs at the time of cardiac arrest. Twenty-four hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring demonstrated premature ventricular beats in four patients (44%). Electrophysiologic stimulation induced sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) or fibrillation (VF) in five patients, nonsustained VT in one patient and less than five ventricular beats in the remaining three patients. Of five patients with inducible sustained VT or VF, four had complete suppression of inducible VT with antiarrhythmic therapy, and none of these four patients died suddenly or had clinical VT after an average follow-up of 27 months (range 12 to 41 months). The remaining patient with inducible sustained VT refused serial electropharmacologic testing, was treated empirically with amiodarone (400 mg/day) and died suddenly eight months later. Of the four patients with noninducible sustained VT or VF, three received no antiarrhythmic therapy and one was given a beta-blocker. None had recurrent cardiac arrest or symptomatic VT after an average follow-up of 17 months (range 13 to 20 months). Thus, inducibility of sustained VT or VF provided a reliable end point for long term antiarrhythmic therapy and noninducibility identified a subset of patients that had an excellent prognosis without specific antiarrhythmic therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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