Implications of ventricular arrhythmia “bursts” with normal epicardial flow, myocardial blush, and ST-segment recovery in anterior ST-elevation myocardial infarction reperfusion: A biosignature of direct myocellular injury “downstream of downstream”

Author:

Majidi Mohamed12,Kosinski Andrzej S13,Al-Khatib Sana M14,Smolders Lilian2,Cristea Ecaterina5,Lansky Alexandra J6,Stone Gregg W57,Mehran Roxana58,Gibbons Raymond J9,Crijns Harry J210,Wellens Hein J10,Gorgels Anton P210,Krucoff Mitchell W14

Affiliation:

1. Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, USA

2. Department of Cardiology, Maastricht University Medical Center, The Netherlands

3. Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Duke University Medical Center, USA

4. Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, USA

5. Cardiovascular Research Foundation, USA

6. Department of Medicine, Yale University, USA

7. Columbia University, USA

8. Mount Sinai Medical Center, USA

9. Mayo Clinic Foundation, USA

10. Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands

Abstract

Aims: Establishing epicardial flow with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is necessary but not sufficient to ensure nutritive myocardial reperfusion. We evaluated whether adding myocardial blush grade (MBG) and quantitative reperfusion ventricular arrhythmia “bursts” (VABs) surrogates provide a more informative biosignature of optimal reperfusion in patients with Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) 3 flow and ST-segment recovery (STR). Methods and results: Anterior STEMI patients with final TIMI 3 flow had protocol-blinded analyses of simultaneous MBG, continuous 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) STR, Holter VABs, and day 5–14 SPECT imaging infarct size (IS) assessments. Over 20 million cardiac cycles from >4500 h of continuous ECG monitoring in subjects with STR were obtained. IS and clinical outcomes were examined in patients stratified by MBG and VABs. VABs occurred in 51% (79/154) of subjects. Microcirculation (MBG 2/3) was restored in 75% (115/154) of subjects, of whom 53% (61/115) had VABs. No VABs were observed in subjects without microvascular flow (MBG of 0). Of 115 patients with TIMI 3 flow, STR, and MBG 2/3, those with VABs had significantly larger IS (median: 23.0% vs 6.0%, p=0.001). Multivariable analysis identified reperfusion VABs as a factor significantly associated with larger IS ( p=0.015). Conclusions: Despite restoration of normal epicardial flow, open microcirculation, and STR, concomitant VABs are associated with larger myocardial IS, possibly reflecting myocellular injury in reperfusion settings. Combining angiographic and ECG parameters of epicardial, microvascular, and cellular response to STEMI intervention provides a more predictive “biosignature” of optimal reperfusion than do single surrogate markers.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,General Medicine

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