Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate the electrophysiological mechanisms of post-surgical atrial tachycardias (ATs) during mapping with an automated high-resolution mapping system (Rhythmia, Boston Scientific, Marlborough, Massachusetts).
Background: Mapping and ablation of post-operative ATs following previous open-heart surgery is often challenging because the potential mechanisms remain incompletely understood.
Methods: Fifty-one consecutive patients underwent mapping and ablation of post-surgical ATs.
Results: A total of 64 ATs were identified, and the mechanism was macro re-entry in 58 of 63 (92.1%) ATs, focal in 4 ATs, localized micro re-entry in 1 AT, and undetermined in 1 AT. Of 11 patients who underwent surgical repair of congenital heart disease, 6 (54.5%) had peri-tricuspid re-entrant AT, 5 had either right atrial (RA) free-wall incisional ATs or figure-8 re-entrant ATs, with an isthmus between the tricuspid annulus and the RA free-wall incision or between the incisions, and none had left atrial (LA) or focal ATs. In 32 patients with valve replacement and 8 who underwent valvuloplasty, peri-tricuspid ATs were observed in 14 (43.4%) and 6 (75%) patients, RA free wall or septal incisions-related ATs were seen in 7 and 2 patients, and LA macro re-entrant ATs were observed in 12 patients and 1 patient, respectively. A macro pseudo re-entry pattern was identified in 8 of 51 patients (15.7%). All these activations could be easily excluded by manually moving the window of interest, except in 2 cases with a figure-8 re-entrant configuration.
Conclusions: RA macro re-entrant ATs predominate, irrespective of the types of initial surgical procedures, but LA ATs occur more frequently in patients with valve replacement. Pseudo re-entry atrial activation is common and easily recognized by adjusting the mapping window.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacep.2018.07.002 | DOI Listing |
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