Circulation, Vol 55, 408-417, Copyright © 1977 by American Heart Association
C Brechenmacher, P Coumel, J-P Fauchier, J-P Cachera and TN James
Paroxysmal tachycardias proved fatal in a middle-aged man with type A
Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. Efforts to control his arrhythmias included
a surgical incision into the left atrium, based on discovery of early left
ventricular activation during epicardial mapping. The incision did not
alter any electrocardiographic or clinical feature; at later necropsy
examination it was found that the incision had not cut a nearby left
atrioventricular (A-V) connection. Serial section study of the entire A-V
rings and septal junction of this heart also demonstrated a second unusual
A-V connection, between the atrial septum and the region of the His bundle.
This latter connection was anatomically eccentric to the normal
organization of this region and may have caused an alteration in the local
electrophysiological behavior. The left lateral A-V connection may have
been of no electrophysiological significance since it was composed of
ordinary working myocardial cells. These and other possible correlations
are discussed in the context of the clinical features, numerous
electrophysiological observations, and the meticulously determined
anatomical findings.
ARTICLES
XXII. Intractable paroxysmal tachycardias which proved fatal in type A Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
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