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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-8703(88)90758-2 | DOI Listing |
Am Heart J
December 1988
University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa.
Multiprogrammable dual-demand AV sequential (DVI, MN) pacemakers were implanted in twenty-three patients (in one of them a DVI, MN unit was used as a VVI, MN with the aid of an atrial plug) with supraventricular tachycardias after electrophysiological studies revealed a great variety of AV reentry circuits. The latter included tachycardias involving accessory pathways of the Kent type, manifest or concealed Wolff-Parkinson-White syndromes, nodo-ventricular (Mahaim) tracts, "enhanced" AV node (or extra AV nodal) pathways and dual AV pathways. In addition, multiprogrammable "non-committed" AV sequential (DVI, MN and DDD, M) pacemakers were permanently implanted to treat different forms of ventricular tachyarrhythmias that included: torsade de pointes in the Romano-Ward syndrome and Chagas' cardiomyopathy, ventricular tachycardia which is bradycardia-dependent (in Chagas' cardiomyopathy) and reciprocal beats induced by, and producing severe hemodynamic derangements in a patient with a conventional VVI unit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo cases with a concealed left-sided accessory atrioventricular bypass tract are described. In both, functional longitudinal dissociation of the atrioventricular node narrowed the range of atrial premature beat coupling intervals which could initiate re-entry using the accessory pathway. In case 1 early premature atrial beats were followed by an atrioventricular nodal re-entrant echo.
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