We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
The Upper Link of Human Common Atrial Flutter Circuit: Definition by Multiple Endocardial Recordings during Entrainment.
- Authors
Arribas, Fernando; López-Gil, María; Gosío, Francisco G.; Núñez, Ambrosio
- Abstract
Common atrial flutter is due to a macroreentry circuit in the right atrium, but the cranial path of the circuit has not been defined. The objectives of this article are to determine the cranial turning point of flutter activation in relation to a hypothetic obstacle, the superior vena cava opening, by examining the changes in activation sequence produced by entrainment from different points. In 13 cases of common atrial flutter with typical counter-clockwise right atrial circuits confirmed by endocardial mapping the atrium was paced from the high posterior and mid-septal walls. Entrainment was confirmed by simultaneous recordings of 6-7 right atrial electrograms. Changes in sequence of electrograms from high septum and high anterolateral walls was sought. Electrogram sequence and morphology did not change with entrainment at the posterior wall with respect to the basal flutter or mid-septal wall entrainment. Pacing "below" the superior vena cava did not advance the anterior wall electrogram in relation to the septal electrogram. These findings suppport the concept that common flutter activation turned around (cranial and anterior to) the superior vena cava opening, and not around the free end of a line of block below the superior vena cava in the posterior wall. Common atrial flutter activation rotates cranial (and anterior) to the superior vena cava opening, through the "right atrial roof." The line of functional block should span from inferior to superior vena cava openings.
- Subjects
ATRIAL fibrillation; ELECTRONOGRAPHY; ELECTROOPTICAL photography; PHOTOTYPESETTING; VENA cava inferior; VENAE cavae
- Publication
Pacing & Clinical Electrophysiology, 1997, Vol 20, Issue 12, p2924
- ISSN
0147-8389
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1540-8159.1997.tb05461.x