International Heart Journal
Online ISSN : 1349-3299
Print ISSN : 1349-2365
ISSN-L : 1349-2365
Clinical Studies
Features Suggesting Preferential Conduction in Pulmonary Artery Ventricular Arrhythmia for Identification of Successful Ablation Sites
Hitoshi HachiyaShigeki KusaNaoyuki MiwaYoshikazu SatoYasuaki TsumagariSatoshi HaraHiroaki OhyaKazuya YamaoHirotaka MuramotoKoji HiguchiAtsushi SuzukiOsamu InabaYasuteru YamauchiTetsuo SasanoYoshito Iesaka
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2021 Volume 62 Issue 4 Pages 771-778

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Abstract

Radiofrequency catheter ablation (RFCA) for pulmonary artery ventricular arrhythmia (PAVA) can be difficult because of the occasional existence of PAVA with preferential conduction.

This study described the characteristics of PAVA that demonstrate preferential conduction.

We analyzed electrocardiographic and electrophysiological data from 8 patients found to have PAVAs with preferential conduction out of 183 patients (4.4%) with right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) arrhythmias who underwent RFCA at our hospitals. The PAVA with preferential conduction were classified into two types. In type 1 PAVA, successful ablation sites (success-sites) exhibited discrete prepotentials with an isoelectric line, in which the activation time (AT) was ≥ 50 milliseconds. In type 2 PAVA, excellent pace mapping was achieved at two sites separated by ≥ 20 mm: one in the RVOT free wall and the other at the success-site in the pulmonary artery. Type 1 and 2 PAVA features were considered signs of a short and long preferential conduction pathway, respectively.

There were four patients each with type 1 and 2 PAVA. Type 1 PAVA was distinguished by the isoelectric line at success-sites with the mean AT of 78 ± 25.1 milliseconds. In type 2 PAVAs, although the AT at RVOT sites was very short (18.5 ± 10.1 milliseconds), the AT at success-sites was longer than that at the RVOT by 42.3 ± 36.2 milliseconds. Type 2 PAVAs displayed distinct electrocardiogram (ECG) features (R wave in lead I, RR′ in inferior leads, and transitional zone in V4) not found in typical PAVA ECGs.

PAVA with preferential conduction can manifest in distinct ways on the ECG and intracardiac mapping. Knowledge of these features may facilitate successful RFCA of such PAVA cases.

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© 2021 by the International Heart Journal Association
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