Background-Dual-loop atrial reentrant tachycardias have not been clinically described. Methods and Results-Five patients (3 men, 2 women; mean age, 48Ϯ16 years) were studied 24Ϯ15 years after surgical closure of an ostium secundum atrial septal defect for drug-resistant atrial tachycardia. Complete tachycardia mapping was performed in the right atrium with multipolar catheters and a 3-dimensional electroanatomic mapping system (Biosense), followed by linear radiofrequency ablation of the narrowest part of each complete loop. Six tachycardias with a typical flutter morphology, a cycle length of 262Ϯ40 ms, and a superior f-wave axis (Ϫ77Ϯ11°) were mapped, 4 with a Biosense map including 106Ϯ32 points. Five figure-8 tachycardias had a counterclockwise loop around the tricuspid valve sharing a common anterior channel with a clockwise loop around the lateral atriotomy scar. One tachycardia was thought to have 2 counterclockwise loops around the same obstacles. Radiofrequency delivery in the cavotricuspid isthmus in each case transformed the tachycardia without any pause in a different morphology tachycardia with an inferior P-wave axis (50Ϯ42°) and nearly the same cycle length (272Ϯ39 ms) but with the periatriotomy loop alone. This arrhythmia required ablation of a second isthmus: between the lower end of the atriotomy and the inferior vena cava in 4 and the superior tricuspid annulus in 1. After a follow-up of 19Ϯ6 months, there were no recurrences. Figure-
Conclusions-
PVs are the dominant triggers reinitiating chronic AF in this patient population. Elimination of PV potentials by ostial RF applications results in stable sinus rhythm in 60%. A larger group and longer follow-up are needed to investigate further the role of trigger ablation in curative therapy for chronic AF.
Lone atrial fibrillation (AF) is defined by the absence of identifiable causes of AF, but its hemodynamics have not been investigated. Twenty-eight patients with lone AF were compared with 14 control patients referred for Wolff-Parkinson-White ablation. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography were performed to rule out structural heart disease, followed by transseptally performed complete hemodynamic evaluation of the left heart systolic and diastolic function. There was no evidence of diastolic dysfunction according to echocardiographic criteria in AF and control patients. There was no difference in echocardiographic measurements, except for a significantly higher inferosuperior left atrial dimension seen in the four-chamber apical view in AF patients (51+/-10 vs 40+/-6 mm, P = 0.03). Hemodynamic evaluation showed that end-diastolic left ventricular pressure and the nadir of the left atrial Y descent were significantly higher in lone AF patients versus controls: 13+/-5 versus 8+/-3 mmHg (P = 0.001) and 6.7+/-3 versus 4.6+/-2.7 mmHg (P = 0.05). Our results demonstrated the presence of diastolic left heart dysfunction in patients with so-called lone AF.
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