AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the conduction properties of the crista terminalis (CT) in patients with atrial flutter, focusing on a specific transverse conduction (TC) site.
  • Researchers used a 20-pole catheter to analyze potential changes in conduction at various pacing rates, discovering that TC was present in most patients but exhibited unidirectional conduction in the majority of cases.
  • The findings indicated that the TC site is consistent in location and exhibits distinct conduction behavior depending on pacing from different atrial regions, with a significantly higher block rate during pacing from the low anterior right atrium compared to the low posterior right atrium.

Article Abstract

Background: The difference in the conduction properties of the crista terminalis (CT) along its course, has not been fully clarified. Using the vector mapping method, we localized the transverse conduction (TC) site of the CT and elucidated its conduction capabilities in patients with typical atrial flutter (AF).

Methods: The TC site of the CT was localized by the analysis of the polarity reversal of the double potentials recorded at 10 sites along the CT using a 20-pole deflectable catheter in 17 patients. The conduction capabilities of the TC site were analyzed during incremental pacing delivered from 100 beats/min to 2-to-1 local capture at the low anterior (LARA) and posterior (LPRA) right atrium.

Results: At a pacing rate of 100 beats/min, TC at a single site was observed in 15 patients during LARA pacing and 7 patients during LPRA pacing, respectively. TC sites were distributed from superior to middle third of the CT in all patients. TC was bidirectional in 4 sites, but was unidirectional in the remaining 14 sites. Following an increase in the pacing rate, TC was blocked in all 7 sites during LPRA pacing and 11 of 15 sites during LARA pacing. Shift in the location of the TC site was not observed in any of the patients before TC block. The conduction block rate during pacing from LARA was significantly higher than that from LPRA (211 +/- 59 beats/min vs 145 +/- 66 beats/min, P < 0.01).

Conclusions: The superior to middle third of the CT provides TC capabilities. The TC across the CT was caused by a preferential conduction site and most of these TC were unidirectional, and stable in location irrespective of the change in the conduction rate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-8159.2005.00142.xDOI Listing

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