Circulation, Vol 74, 89-96, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
S Kamakura, K Shimomura, T Ohe, M Matsuhisa and H Toyoshima
Forty-one patients (23 men and 18 women, ages 20 to 66 years) with
Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome were studied with isopotential body surface
maps during sinus rhythm to find the most reliable index for predicting the
sites of single accessory pathways. The sites predicted by surface maps
were compared with those confirmed by multicatheter electrophysiologic
study or in the course of surgical operation. Location of the initial
minimum by a time criterion, 40 msec after onset of the QRS complex, was
not reliable enough for prediction in patients with the small delta wave on
their electrocardiograms, because ventricular activation via the normal
conduction pathway significantly influenced the location of the minimum.
Location of the minimum by an amplitude criterion, -0.15 mV or slightly
deeper, was influenced minimally by fusion of ventricular activation, the
patient's body size, or age and corresponded well to the site of the
accessory pathway in 36 of 41 patients. Those minima appeared on
circumscribed areas of the map in accordance with the anatomic subdivisions
of the atrioventricular ring. Thus location of the minimum by the amplitude
criterion was an excellent index for predicting the site of the accessory
pathway, regardless of the degree of ventricular fusion. These
amplitude-based map features suggest that nonstandard electrocardiograms
recorded from selected positions on the body surface can be used as
accurate predictors of the sites of accessory pathways.
ARTICLES
The role of initial minimum potentials on body surface maps in predicting the site of accessory pathways in patients with Wolff- Parkinson-White syndrome
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