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1.
Accessory pathway (AP) ablation is one of the most satisfying invasive electrophysiology procedures associated with high success rates and relatively few complications. Nevertheless, when APs are found on the cardiac septum, ablative procedures become complex, and unique pitfalls need to be avoided.These difficulties with septal ablation are magnified in the pediatric population. The relatively small heart, rapid nodal conduction, and proximity of the arterial system specifically complicate septal ablation in children. The electrophysiologist must use every tool in his or her armamentarium, including exact delineation of pathway location, identification of pathway potentials, detection of the presence of pathway slant, etc. In addition, an exact knowledge of the complex anatomy of the cardiac septum, including the posteroseptal space, the aortic cusp region, and the proximity of the AV conduction system and coronary vessels, becomes mandatory.In this review, we describe the developmental anatomy and regional anatomy of septal accessory pathways. We then discuss approaches to map specific to pathways in particularly problematic regions at or near the septum, including venous and aortic cusp related accessory pathways.  相似文献   

2.
We report a clinical case of a 22-year-old female referred to our institution due to palpitations and preexcitation. Her ECG suggested a right superior paraseptal accessory pathway (AP), which was localised during the electrophysiological study at the superior paraseptal region in close proximity to the His recordings. Reproducible orthodromic reciprocating tachycardia was induced by atrial pacing with extrastimuli. Cryo-mapping performed in the area of earliest atrial activation was not able to terminate the tachycardia. A second attempt, slightly more posterior, caused mechanical block of the AP, which rendered the tachycardia non-inducible. More pressure with the ablation catheter determined a Wenckebach type supra-hisian AV block, which was transient but reproducible. Given this finding no ablation was done. Simultaneous block to the AP and the atrioventricular node has rarely been reported using radiofrequency energy. However, to our knowledge this phenomenon has not been previously reported in large series using cryo-thermal energy.  相似文献   

3.
A 59-year-old female with structurally normal heart was admitted to our hospital for treatment of highly symptomatic, drug refractory atrial premature beats (APB). ECG revealed atrial parasystolic trigeminy. The arrhythmogenic focus was mapped and ablated using magnetic remote navigation and 3D electroanatomical mapping system. To our knowledge, this is the first report on successful ablation of frequent APBs in the non-coronary aortic cusp.  相似文献   

4.
We report a 26-year-old woman with frequent episodes of palpitation and dizziness. Resting electrocardiography showed no evidence of ventricular preexcitation. During electrophysiologic study, a concealed right posteroseptal accessory pathway was detected and orthodromic atrioventricular reentrant tachycardia incorporating this pathway as a retrograde limb was reproducibly induced. After successful ablation of right posteroseptal accessory pathway, another tachycardia was induced using a concealed right posterolateral accessory pathway in tachycardia circuit. After loss of retrograde conduction of second accessory pathway with radiofrequency ablation, dual atrioventricular nodal physiology was detected and typical atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia was repeatedly induced. Slow pathway ablation was done successfully. Finally sustained self-terminating atrial tachycardia was induced under isoproterenol infusion but no attempt was made for ablation. During 8-month follow-up, no recurrence of symptoms attributable to tachycardia was observed.  相似文献   

5.
Accessory pathways (APs) represent the substrate for atrioventricular reentrant tachycardia. Catecholamine-sensitivity is an uncommon feature of APs and has been almost exclusively been described in APs with antegrade conduction. We present the rare case of a catecholamine-dependent concealed AP that was only unmasked upon isoproterenol stimulation and successfully ablated. This case highlights the importance of systematic isoproterenol stimulation in patients referred for ablation of supraventricular tachycardia - in particular if the baseline electrophysiology study is negative. Otherwise, ablation targets may be missed.Learning objectiveThe absence of retrograde ventriculo-atrial conduction does not automatically exclude the presence of a concealed accessory pathway. Systematic isoproterenol stimulation should be part of any electrophysiology study for supraventricular tachycardia, to search for catecholamine-sensitive accessory pathways that may be otherwise missed.  相似文献   

6.

Introduction

Posteroseptal accessory pathways account for 34.5% of the total. Of these, 36% are located within the coronary sinus (CS). Its ablation requires technical alternatives to avoid damage to surrounding tissues, especially branches of the right coronary artery.

Case report

A 22-year-old man was referred for re-do ablation of an accessory left septal-septal (PSE) pathway. Inside the CS, a precocity of 25?ms was found in the region of the median cardiac vein (VCM) (Fig. 2, panel A). Radiofrequency (RF) was administered with a non-irrigated bidirectional catheter within this vessel with resolution of the pre-excitation after 5 seconds. Immediately after, the patient presented chest pain and revealed a ST segment elevation of 1 mm in the inferior leads of ECG. Coronary angiography showed occlusion of the middle third of the posterior ventricular branch of the right coronary artery, with no signs of thrombus or dissection. Arterial angioplasty was performed with a bare metal stent, followed by TIMI III distal flow. Retrograde aortic mapping was performed and a precocity of 20?ms was found in the PSE region. The RF was applied followed by loss of pre-excitation after 1.5 seconds of application.

Conclusion

This case demonstrates the risks involving delivering radiofrequency within the coronary sinus. We discuss some strategy that could help electrophysiologists in similar cases.  相似文献   

7.
Aims and objectivesAtrial fibrillation (AF) with preexcitation can be life threatening. Our study evaluated the incidence, clinical features, electrophysiologic characteristics and outcomes of patients presenting with AF and fast ventricular rates associated with an antegrade conducting accessory pathway.MethodsHospital data of patients who had undergone electrophysiology study and radiofrequency ablation for AF and Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome was retrospectively evaluated over 10 years and prospective data was further collected over 1 year. Out of 2876 patients undergoing electrophysiology study, 320 patients had manifest preexcitation on ECG. Forty one patients who had presented with AF and fast ventricular rates were included in the study.ResultsForty one (12.8%) patients out of 320 patients of WPW syndrome patients presented with AF and fast ventricular rates. Mean age of presentation was 38.5 ± 12.3 yrs. Twenty nine (72.5%) were male. Most common presenting features were palpitations, presyncope and syncope. Twenty eight (71.1%) patients were electrically cardioverted on presentation, of which two patients having narrow complex tachycardia, when given adenosine, developed AF and fast ventricular rates and had to be electrically cardioverted. Intravenous amiodarone converted AF to sinus rhythm in 11 (28.9%) patients. Right postero-septal pathway (33.3%) followed by coronary sinus epicardial pathway (22.9%) were the most commonly located pathways associated with AF. Five (12.2%) patients had multiple pathways. CS diverticulum was seen in 6 (14.7%) patients. Ablation was done during AF in 6 (14.7%) patients. All except one had immediate successful ablation. One patient had a recurrence of preexcitation on follow up and successfully ablated during redo procedure.ConclusionAF with WPW syndrome is not uncommon. AF is commonly associated with posteriorly located accessory pathways, CS diverticulum and multiple pathways. Radiofrequency ablation has good outcomes.  相似文献   

8.
A 15-year-old female with WPW syndrome and normal heart underwent an electrophysiology study for paroxysmal palpitations and syncope. Intravenous adenosine produced an unexpected response of QRS changes and advanced AV block. During isoproteronol infusion, short-lasting and poorly tolerated wide QRS tachycardia was inducible, but pacing maneuvers were not feasible during tachycardia to determine its definitive mechanism. However, various electrophysiologic phenomena including adenosine response, junctional beats pattern, and multisite atrial pacing were helpful to overcome the diagnosis challenges. Finally, careful evaluation of tachycardia features and the comprehensive electrophysiology study were crucial to establish presence of unusual preexcitation variants, and thus to guide successful catheter ablation of the arrhythmic substrate.  相似文献   

9.
A 57-year-old man underwent his seventh ablation session for atrial tachycardia (AT). His previous ablations involved several regions of the right atrium (RA) and left atrium (LA). The AT was characterized as biatrial tachycardia with a circuit involving the mitral annulus and septal RA. The AT was terminated by ablation through the insertion site of Bachmann’s bundle (BB) in both atria. After 3 months, the patient underwent his eighth ablation session because of AT recurrence. Activation maps showed that the connection from the RA to LA and vice versa was maintained via BB and the coronary sinus, respectively. The ablation target to interrupt the AT circuit was the mitral isthmus (MI), not BB, because BB supplied the electrical activation of the left atrial appendage (LAA) via a unidirectional electrical connection from the RA to LA. Ablation attempts from within the coronary sinus were performed to target the epicardial connection in the MI and led to complete blockage of the connection from the LA to RA. Otherwise, the connection from the RA to LA was preserved via BB. The patient was free of symptoms and anti-arrhythmic drugs at the 4-month follow-up. However, he had a high risk of electrical isolation of the LAA because extensive ablations had been performed; the strategy of targeting the MI contributed to the balance between preserving the electrical activation of the LAA and treating the biatrial tachycardia. Verification of the connective pathway between the two atria might be helpful to determine the optimal target.  相似文献   

10.
A 55 year old male presented with recurrent implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) shocks due to polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (PMVT). He had undergone prior catheter ablation for VT three years ago. During the prior attempt he underwent voltage guided substrate ablation. With programmed ventricular extrastimulation (PVES), PMVT was repeatedly induced requiring DC shock. Intravenous procainamide was administered and PVES was repeated which induced sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (MMVT). This VT had pseudo delta waves with maximum deflection index of 0.68, suggestive of epicardial origin. Activation mapping was performed epicardially. Presystolic potentials were recorded in mid anterolateral wall of left ventricular epicardial region. Radiofrequency (RF) ablation at this site terminated the VT. Post ablation there was no inducible tachycardia and patient is free of arrhythmias during 2 years of follow-up.  相似文献   

11.

Background

Radiofrequency catheter ablations of anteroseptal (AS) accessory pathways (AP) in pediatric patients have higher incidence of atrioventricular (AV) block than other AP locations. We report our experience using cryoablation in pediatric patients where a His bundle electrogram was noted on the ablation catheter at the site of the successful ablation.

Methods and Results

We retrospectively reviewed all patients ≤21 years that underwent cryoablation for an AS AP from 2005 to 2012 at our institution (n=70). Patients with a His bundle electrogram noted on the cryoablation catheter at the location of the successful lesion were identified (n=6, 8.5%). All six patients had ventricular preexcitation. Median age of 15.9 years (7.2 - 18.2). AV nodal function was monitored during the cryoablation with intermittent rapid atrial pacing conducted through the AV node (n=2), with atrial extra-stimulus testing (n=2), or during orthodromic reentrant tachycardia (n=2). Acute success occurred in all patients. Two patients had early recurrence of AP conduction. Both patients underwent a second successful cryoablation, again with a His bundle electrogram on the cryoablation catheter. At a median follow-up of 13 months (3 to 37 months) there was no recurrence of accessory pathway conduction and AVN function was normal.

Conclusion

In a small number of pediatric patients with AS AP with a His bundle electrogram seen on the ablation catheter, the use of cryotherapy was safe and effective for elimination of AP conduction without impairment of AV nodal conduction.  相似文献   

12.
A 24-year-old male with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome developed systolic cardiomyopathy and severe heart failure following membranous ventricular septal defect repair and tricuspid valve replacement. Following successful catheter ablation of a right anterolateral accessory pathway (AP), complete AV block with junctional escape rhythm was noted. Patient subsequently underwent implantation of a biventricular ICD. Heart failure symptoms significantly improved soon after and left ventricular systolic function normalized 3 months post-procedure. In this case, surgically acquired AV block likely explains development of postoperative cardiomyopathy by facilitating ventricular activation solely via the AP and thereby increasing the degree of ventricular dyssynchrony.  相似文献   

13.
A 35-year-old male presented with symptoms of shortness of breath and ankle oedema which had developed within a few days. The symptoms had started suddenly following a mountain bike trip. Physical examination revealed a blood pressure of 90/40 mmHg, no fever and a continuous murmur on auscultation of the heart, as well as signs of left and right heart failure. Echocardiography showed moderate pericardial effusion and a hyperdynamic left and right ventricle with signs of right ventricular volume overload. Turbulent flow was seen in the aortic root and a shunt was demonstrated from the aortic root to the right atrium (figure 1) through a ruptured sinus Valsalva aneurysm of the non-coronary cusp (figure 2).  相似文献   

14.
A 51-year-old male developed recurrent episodes of palpitations and pre-syncope after surgical aortic valve replacement. Electrocardiograms after surgery revealed a wide complex tachycardia with alternating left bundle branch and right bundle branch block morphologies. An electrophysiology study (EPS) demonstrated typical bundle branch reentry ventricular tachycardia (BBRVT) treated successfully with right bundle ablation. We demonstrate the key diagnostic features of BBRVT on EPS, describe the circuit of BBRVT with explanation of the HV pseudointerval, and highlight the association of BBRVT and valve replacement.  相似文献   

15.
A 35-year-old female was referred to our hospital. For more than ten years, she had had complaints of two types of paroxysmal palpitations, both with a sudden onset. The first type was rapid and often accompanied by light-headedness; the second she described as much less rapid, better tolerated, and often terminated by the Valsalva manoeuvre. The incidence and duration of both types of paroxysms were increasing. In the emergency room of the referring hospital, the tachycardia was terminated with intravenous verapamil.The electrophysiological study revealed normal conduction parameters. Premature atrial beats (due to catheter manipulation) or delivered atrial extra stimuli over a wide range easily induced two types of tachycardia.AV node modification by radiofrequency ablation using the posterior approach was performed. With this approach, RF ablation of the caudal extension of the AV node is performed, which modifies the slow pathway, so that the reentrant circuit is interrupted. After this intervention, no tachycardia whatsoever could be induced and during followup (8 months), no recurrent arrhythmia of any kind occurred.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Accessory pathway (AP) ablation is not always easy. Our purpose was to assess the age-related prevalence of AP location, electrophysiological and prognostic data according to this location.

Methods

Electrophysiologic study (EPS) was performed in 994 patients for a pre-excitation syndrome. AP location was determined on a 12 lead ECG during atrial pacing at maximal preexcitation and confirmed at intracardiac EPS in 494 patients.

Results

AP location was classified as anteroseptal (AS)(96), right lateral (RL)(54), posteroseptal (PS)(459), left lateral (LL)(363), nodoventricular (NV)(22).Patients with ASAP or RLAP were younger than patients with another AP location. Poorly-tolerated arrhythmias were more frequent in patients with LLAP than in other patients (0.009 for ASAP, 0.0037 for RLAP, <0.0001 for PSAP).Maximal rate conducted over AP was significantly slower in patients with ASAP and RLAP than in other patients. Malignant forms at EPS were more frequent in patients with LLAP than in patients with ASAP (0.002) or PSAP (0.001).Similar data were noted when AP location was confirmed at intracardiac EPS. Among untreated patients, poorly-tolerated arrhythmia occurred in patients with LLAP (3) or PSAP (6). Failures of ablation were more frequent for AS or RL AP than for LL or PS AP.

Conclusions

AS and RLAP location in pre-excitation syndrome was more frequent in young patients. Maximal rate conducted over AP was lower than in other locations. Absence of poorly-tolerated arrhythmias during follow-up and higher risk of ablation failure should be taken into account for indications of AP ablation in children with few symptoms.  相似文献   

17.
JR is an 18-year-old male with five-year history of going to bed late and waking up late. He gives history of poor frustration tolerance, inattention and fidgetiness in school for which he has been unsuccessfully been treated with stimulant medications for last 3 years. There is history of similar sleep problems in his father who works nights as a mechanic. JR's sleep log shows him going to bed early morning and waking up late morning/afternoon. He shows no sleep maintenance problems and sleeps an average of 8 h per night. He shows no symptoms of depression, anxiety, inattention or hyperactivity during his hospital stay. He does not show any learning, cognitive, attention or intellectual deficits. He is currently not taking any medications. He is discharged home after 3-day hospital stay and is reportedly doing well working in a video rental store at night.  相似文献   

18.
Atrioventricular (AV) junction ablation for treatment of refractory atrial fibrillation is a well defined, standardized procedure and the simplest of commonly performed radiofrequency ablations in the field of cardiac electrophysiology. We report successful AV junction ablation using an inferior approach in a case of inferior vena cava interruption. Inability during the procedure to initially pass the ablation catheter into the right ventricle, combined with low amplitude electrograms, led to suspicion of an anatomic abnormality. This was determined to be a heterotaxy syndrome with inferior vena cava interruption and azygos continuation, draining in turn into the superior vena cava. Advancing Schwartz right 0 (SRO) sheath through the venous abnormality into the right atrium allowed adequate catheter stability to successfully induce complete AV block with radiofrequency energy.  相似文献   

19.
Sudden death might complicate the follow-up of symptomatic patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (WPW) and might be the first event in patients with asymptomatic WPW. The risk of sudden death is increased in some clinical situations. Generally, the noninvasive studies are unable to predict the risk of sudden death correctly . The electrophysiological study is the best means to detect the risk of sudden death and to evaluate the nature of symptoms. Methods used to define the prognosis of WPW are well-defined. At first the maximal rate of conduction through the accessory pathway is evaluated; programmed atrial stimulation using 1 and 2 extrastimuli delivered at different cycle lengths is then used to determine the accessory pathway refractory period and to induce a supraventricular tachycardia. These methods should be performed in the control state and repeated in adrenergic situations either during exercise test or more simply during a perfusion of small doses of isoproterenol. The induction of an atrial fibrillation with rapid conduction through the accessory pathway (> 240/min in control state, > 300/min after isoproterenol) is the sign of a form of WPW at risk of sudden death.  相似文献   

20.
About two years ago, on a cool Southern California day, Vasili Davydov addressed a group of social scientists at the University of California, San Diego. He began his talk with a paradox. He had come, he said, to tell us about educational activity. He promised to exhibit principles that promote educational activity, and applied programs deriving from those principles. Then he laughed. "But you'll never see educational activity in the school," he said, and laughed again.  相似文献   

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