Circulation, Vol 52, 58-72, Copyright © 1975 by American Heart Association
HJ Wellens and D Durrer
To study the pathway of tachycardia in patients with the Wolff-
Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome and reciprocal tachycardias, results from
intracavitary recordings and atrial and ventricular stimulation were
reviewed in 71 patients with the WPW syndrome and 54 patients without
pre-excitation. In all patients a reproducible tachycardia could be
initated and terminated by appropriately timed electrical stimuli. The
following findings were accepted as suggesting the participation of an
accessory pathway in the tachycardia circuit: 1) no increase in
ventriculo-atrial conduction (V-A C) time following ventricular stimuli
given with increasing prematurity; 2) activation of right or left atrium
(depending upon the location of the atrial end of the accessory pathway)
prior to activation of atrium in the His bundle lead; 3) slowing of
tachycardia following bundle branch block to the ventricle in which the
accessory pathway inserts; 4) V-A C time of early stimuli on the ventricle
during the tachycardia equal to or less than the V-A c time following QRS
complexes during tachycardia; 5) inability to initiate tachycardia or
slowing of tachycardia following the administration of drugs affecting the
accessory pathway. Accepted as suggestive for atrioventricular (A-V) nodal
re-entry were the following factors: 1) activation of atrium following
initiation of tachycardia by a single atrial premature beat after
activation of the bundle of His but before or simultaneous with ventricular
activation in first and subsequent beats of tachycardia; 2) initiation of
tachycardia following a gradual increase in V-A C time with the appearance
of a His bundle electrogram in between the premature beat and retrograde
atrial activation; 3) gradual increase in V-A C time with the appearance of
a His bundle electrogram following ventricular premature beats given with
increasing prematurity; 4) two-to-one block distal to the A-V node or His
bundle with persistance of tachycardia. If only positive findings were
accepted, 51 patients of the WPW group used their accessory pathway during
tachycardia. In eight patients re-entry was confined to the A-V node. In
the remaining 12 patients the mechanism was not clear. Of the patients not
showing pre-excitation in A-V direction, 47 patients seemed to have their
re-entry circuit in the A-V node, five patients used an accessory pathway
in V-A direction, and in two patients the pathway of tachycardia could not
be identified.
ARTICLES
The role of an accessory atrioventricular pathway in reciprocal tachycardia. Observations in patients with and without the Wolff- Parkinson-White syndrome
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