Myocardial perforation is a rare complication of permanent pacemaker insertion and is usually detected during the first month after implantation. Pericardial effusion often occurs at the same time, and as a consequence may generate difficulties in the diagnostic workup due to the various aetiologies of its origin. Computed tomography has been used for the documentation of lead perforation, but its diagnostic accuracy in comparison to echocardiographic examination has not been validated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiofrequency ablation is the interventional therapy of choice for the definitive cure of patients with tachycardias facilitated by accessory pathways. Ablation of an accessory pathway at sites close to the His bundle is inevitably associated with an increased risk of causing complete atrioventricular block. Here we describe the case of a patient with pre-excitation syndrome and episodes of supraventricular tachycardia, in whom an electrophysiological study identified an accessory pathway so close to the His bundle that discrete sites between the pathway and the His bundle were extremely difficult to find.
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