Abstract

Catheter ablation orientated on the induction of a functional intraatrial block within the posterior isthmus of the tricuspid annulus has been shown to effectively abolish atrial flutter. In order to improve and simplify the current technique, a strategy based on an electrode catheter for combined right atrial and coronary sinus mapping and stimulation was explored prospectively. Twenty-four consecutive patients referred for catheter ablation of recurrent type I atrial flutter were included. A steerable 7 Fr catheter (Medtronic/Cardiorhythm) composed of two segments with 20 electrodes was used for right atrial and coronary sinus activation mapping and stimulation. Multiple steering mechanisms allowing intubation and positioning of the distal part within the coronary sinus were incorporated into the device. Adequate positioning of the mapping catheter was achieved solely via a transfemoral approach in all patients after 7.7 +/- 4.6 minutes, providing stable electrogram recordings during the entire ablation procedure. Radiofrequency current ablation (16.3 +/- 9.6 pulses) caused a significant bidirectional increase of the mean intraatrial conduction times via the posterior isthmus irrespective to the stimulation interval. Significant changes of intraatrial conduction properties were induced during ablation in 22 of 24 patients (bidirectional block: n = 18, unidirectional block: n = 3, conduction delay: n = 1, unchanged conduction: n = 2). Following ablation atrial flutter was noninducible in all patients. Twenty-two of 24 patients (92%) remained free of atrial flutter episodes during a follow-up of 12.5 +/- 5.7 months. Two of six patients without a bidirectional conduction block had a recurrence of atrial flutter. Atrial flutter ablation guided by the induction of an intraatrial conduction block can be effectively performed with this novel strategy for combined mapping of the posterior tricuspid isthmus, including coronary sinus and right atrial free wall. This transfemoral approach has a high accuracy with respect to the detection of radiofrequency current-induced changes of intraatrial conduction patterns.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call