(Circulation. 1996;93:960-968.)
© 1996 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From Harvard-Thorndike Institute of Electrophysiology, Cardiology Division, Beth Israel Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Correspondence to Mark E. Josephson, MD, Cardiovascular Division, Beth Israel Hospital, 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02215.
Background Selective ablation of either the fast or the slow pathway resulting in cure of AV nodal reentry tachycardia (AVNRT) has led to the concept that these pathways are discrete, anatomically defined structures. We hypothesized that if a discrete retrograde fast pathway exists, it should be possible to record a single focus of early atrial activation near the apex of Koch's triangle, with sequential spread of depolarization to the rest of the atria.
Methods and Results We evaluated 46 patients (33 women, 13 men; mean age, 45±17 years) undergoing electrophysiology study and catheter ablation for typical AVNRT. Retrograde atrial activation during AVNRT (337±43 ms) and ventricular pacing at a similar cycle length (352±51 ms) was recorded in the region of Koch's triangle with a decapolar catheter in the His bundle position, a multipolar catheter in the coronary sinus, and a deflectable quadripolar catheter along the tricuspid annulus anterior to the coronary sinus ostium. Earliest atrial activation was recorded at the apex of the triangle of Koch in 38 patients during ventricular pacing and in 43 patients during AVNRT. A broad wave front of atrial activation was recorded in 17 patients during ventricular pacing and in 26 patients during AVNRT. During AVNRT, only 2 patients had a single early site with focal and sequential activation along the tendon of Todaro. There was concordance in the pattern of atrial activation between ventricular pacing and AVNRT in only 21 of 46 patients.
Conclusions Retrograde atrial activation over the fast pathway is heterogeneous within Koch's triangle and the coronary sinus, both for the entire population and for individual patients during different modes of activation. These data do not support the concept of an anatomically discrete retrograde fast pathway.
Key Words: tachycardia atrioventricular node reentry
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