First-in-human high-density endo-epicardial mapping and ablation through left minithoracotomy in a patient with unstable ventricular tachycardia requiring ECMO
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High-definition (HD) and multielectrode mapping catheters have been introduced in order to perform high-quality activation and substrate map during catheter ablation of complex arrhythmias. A peculiar HD multielectrode mapping catheter is the Advisor HD Grid Sensor Enabled (SE) multipolar mapping catheter (Abbott Medical, Minneapolis, MN), designed with 16 × 1 mm equidistant electrodes (4 splines, 4 electrodes for each spline) with 3 mm electrode spacing that, in combination with the automated HD wave algorithm, allows the rapid assessment of voltage, activation, and directionality of conduction.Keywords:
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Reentry
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Reentry
Reentrancy
Atrioventricular reentrant tachycardia
Effective refractory period
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Reentry
Atrioventricular node
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We studied an in vitro model of reentrant tachycardia in a ring of ventricular endocardial tissue surrounding the canine mitral and aortic valves to understand how the response of a reentrant tachycardia to premature impulses can provide insight into the underlying tachycardia mechanism, circuit characteristics, and nature of the central barrier. Reproducible regular reentrant tachycardias (cycle length range, 177-450 msec) were induced with programmed stimulation in 19 intact preparations studied at 34-38 degrees C. Tachycardias were sustained and stable until terminated by programmed stimulation in 95% of preparations. Reentry was reliably reinitiated during experiments lasting 2-15 hours. Data supporting reentry as the mechanism of these tachycardias included sequential activation around the ring that spanned the cycle length of the tachycardia, unidirectional block during initiation of the reentrant rhythm, and termination of the tachycardia after interruption of the circuit. Tachycardias in 13 prepar...
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A 73-year-old man was noted to have atrioventricular (AV) nodal reentry tachycardia, which was induced during programmed electrical stimulation. After 1 month of oral amiodarone therapy, AV nodal reentry tachycardia was prevented by the prolongation of atrial refractoriness and not by direct action on the AV node itself.
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Atrioventricular node
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We have characterized, in dogs, a model of inducible regular atrial tachycardia that resembles atrial flutter. The model involves creating a Y-shaped lesion comprised of an intercaval incision and a connected incision across the right atrium. It is suitable for serial studies of the effects of pacing or antiarrhythmic drugs in chronically instrumented animals studied in the awake state for at least several months. The postoperative cycle length of the induced tachycardia varies from 143 to 188 msec, depending on the size of the dog. The tachycardia cycle length was consistent for each dog, and the rhythm--once induced--was very stable until terminated by pacing. The mechanism of the tachycardia was reentry due to circus movement based on the ability to induce and terminate it by premature impulses or overdrive, the ability to reset the tachycardia by single premature stimuli, the pattern of entrainment during overdrive stimulation, and the ability to terminate the tachycardia by interrupting the conductio...
Reentry
Atrial tachycardia
Entrainment (biomusicology)
Atrium (architecture)
Flutter
Effective refractory period
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The purpose of this study was to determine the frequency of atrioventricular (AV) node reentry tachycardia in infants undergoing transesophageal electrophysiological study for paroxysmal tachycardia. The records of all 52 infants < 1-year-old with structurally normal hearts who underwent transesophageal study for paroxysmal tachycardia over a 3-year period were reviewed. Those with a diagnosis of AV node reentry tachycardia underwent complete data review, and follow-up of > 12 months was obtained. Six of 52 infants had a diagnosis of the common type of AV node reentry tachycardia. Tachycardia was diagnosed at a mean age of 2.1 months (range 1 day to 10 months), and 3 of 6 underwent transesophageal study within the first month. Although no patient had structural heart disease, three patients had significant noncardiac disease. Follow-up of 15-38 months (mean 24 +/- 7.8) revealed recurrences in 2 of 6 patients. The mean tachycardia cycle length was 240 ms (range 200-310 ms), and the transesophageal ventriculoatrial intervals ranged from < 30 to 55 ms. All patients had a inducible reentrant tachycardia with a ventriculoatrial interval that remained constant even when tachycardia cycle length increased following verapamil or adenosine administration, or decreased following isoproterenol infusion. Five of 6 had evidence for discontinuous AV node conduction curves. In our patients the substrate for AV node reentry tachycardia was present early in life, and AV node reentry tachycardia can be a clinical problem even in the newborn period.
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Background In canine hearts with inducible reentry, the isthmus tends to form along an axis from the area of last to first activity during sinus rhythm. It was hypothesized that this phenomenon could be quantified to predict reentry and the isthmus location. Methods and Results An in situ canine model of reentrant ventricular tachycardia occurring in the epicardial border zone was used in 54 experiments (25 canine hearts in which primarily long monomorphic runs of figure-8 reentry were inducible, 11 with short monomorphic or polymorphic runs, and 18 lacking inducible reentry). From the sinus rhythm activation map for each experiment, the linear regression coefficient and slope were calculated for the activation times along each of 8 rays extending from the area of last activation. The slope of the regression line for the ray with greatest regression coefficient (called the primary axis) was used to predict whether or not reentry would be inducible (correct prediction in 48 of 54 experiments). For all 36 experiments with reentry, isthmus location and shape were then estimated on the basis of site-to-site differences in sinus rhythm electrogram duration. For long and short runs of reentry, estimated isthmus location and shape partially overlapped the actual isthmus (mean overlap of 71.3% and 43.6%, respectively). On average for all reentry experiments, a linear ablation lesion positioned across the estimated isthmus would have spanned 78.2% of the actual isthmus width. Conclusions Parameters of sinus rhythm activation provide key information for prediction of reentry inducibility and isthmus location and shape.
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Sinus (botany)
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Reentrancy
Atrioventricular reentrant tachycardia
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Bundle Branch Reentry and Interfascicular Reentry. A case of bundle branch reentry tachycardia with an unusual induction pattern is presented. Unlike typical cases of this arrhythmia in which tachycardia is usually inducible with routine programmed ventricular stimulation and/or short‐long sequences, tachycardia in this case was inducible only with atrial stimulation. It also arose spontaneously during atrial flutter and during isoproterenol administration. After ablation of the right bundle, possible interfascicular reentry tachycardia with a similar induction pattern was observed. This tachycardia was successfully ablated in the region of the posterior fascicle of the left bundle branch.
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