Atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT) is the most common supraventricular tachycardia inducible during an electrophysiological study. Although ablative therapy proved to be the treatment of choice, little is known about the components of the tachycardia circuit. The aim of this study is to detect the presence and patterns of specific electrograms representing slow pathway (SP) potentials and to explore Koch's triangle pattern activation during sinus rhythm and/or atrial extraestimulus with a high-density mapping catheter in an attempt to clarify a fast and safety catheter ablation strategy. We hypothesized that, in patients with dual atrioventricular nodal physiology, during sinus rhythm (SR), high-density mapping (HDM) catheters could identify the SP signals, making possible to delineate small areas of slow conduction associated to abnormal electrograms on Koch's triangle. On a second step, radiofrequency (RF) applications safety guided by the HDM obtained with this method, should interrupt the circuit far from the His region. Finally, SP signals should disappear after the RF procedure when performing a new 3D HDM. A control group of patients without AVN dual physiology should show absence of fragmented/slow conduction zones.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
119
3D endocardial mapping in order to identify slow pathway signals and abolish or modificate them after radiofrequency ablation
Jesús Ignacio Jiménez López
Barcelona, Spain
Absence of reinduction of AVNRT after abolition of fragmented/slow conduction signals
Number of patients with absence of fragmented/slow conduction signals observed during sinus rhythm or atrial pacing after radiofrequency application
Time frame: one day
Absence of AVNRT relapses
Number of patients with absence of relapses after 1 month of the electrophysiological study
Time frame: one month
Percentage of patient without AVNRT reinduction after procedure
Percentage of patients without tachycardia induction after radiofrequency applications protocol
Time frame: One day
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