Circulation, Vol 57, 671-677, Copyright © 1978 by American Heart Association
EL Pritchett, JJ Gallagher, M Scheinman and WM Smith
Forty-five patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome and
reciprocating tachycardia which utilized the atrioventricular (A-V) node
for antegrade conduction and an accessory pathway for ventriculo- atrial
(retrograde) conduction were studied. The extrastimulus technique in the
right atrium and coronary sinus at multiple pacing cycle lengths was used.
Three types of "echo zones" were defined by the relationship of the
antegrade effective refractory period (ERP) of the accessory pathway, the
longest coupling interval accompanied by an atrial echo, the ERP of the A-V
node, and the functional refractory period of the atrium. Eighteen of 45
patients (40%) had more than one type of echo zone demonstrated by changing
either pacing site or pacing cycle length or both. Pacing site and
intraventricular conduction delay were found to have important effects on
the longest coupling interval accompanied by an atrial echo in those echo
zones in which the longest coupling interval accompanied by an atrial echo
was less than the antegrade ERP of the accessory pathway. The echo zone is
a useful concept to explain the physiology of the common reciprocating
tachycardia in patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. However,
the echo zone is profoundly affected by pacing site and pacing cycle
length. When these variables are changed, many patients can be shown to
have more than one type of echo zone. Studies of the echo zone have limited
value as therapeutic guides.
ARTICLES
Determinants of antegrade echo zone in the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
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