Programmed ventricular stimulation (PVS), a clinical tool introduced in the early 1980s, aims to prove the electrical vulnerability of the heart and, independent of spontaneous arrhythmia variability, to trigger arrhythmias under controlled conditions. A specific response is the inducibility of monomorphic sustained ventricular tachycardia. This depends on the underlying heart disease, e.g., only for coronary artery disease but not for nonischemic diseases. The value of pharmacologic arrhythmia control as serial electrical testing is uncertain. Up to now there seems to be no prognostic value of PVS concerning sudden cardiac death. PVS is used as a tool to monitor the results of ventricular tachycardia (VT)-catheter ablation in patients who were primarily inducible.
Keyphrases
- catheter ablation
- atrial fibrillation
- coronary artery disease
- left atrial
- left atrial appendage
- heart failure
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- cardiovascular events
- left ventricular
- coronary artery bypass grafting
- pulmonary hypertension
- type diabetes
- acute coronary syndrome
- congenital heart disease
- mitral valve