Abstract

Arrhythmia recurrence after catheter ablation of persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) is not uncommon and frequently requires repeat ablation procedures.1–3 However, the precise arrhythmia that recurs depends on the strategy that was used at the original session. Patients who undergo sole pulmonary vein (PV) isolation usually manifest recurrent AF. Patients who undergo substrate modification, in the form of electrogram based4 or linear ablation,5 frequently develop atrial tachycardia (AT) either during or after the procedure. Whether these organized arrhythmias represent underlying driver tachycardias that were responsible for maintaining AF or occur as a result of our intervention (that is, proarrhythmia) remains unresolved. Article see p 1059 If we are truly unmasking underlying drivers, then our ablation strategy may be validated because it allows us to map and potentially eliminate sources of AF, which otherwise could not be identified during fibrillatory conduction. Alternatively, it is possible that substrate ablation, especially linear left atrial ablation, may result in macroreentrant ATs that were not present during or responsible for maintaining AF. In this case, either the original source(s) has been eliminated or simply grazed and is now supplanted by organized reentry related to zones of slow conduction created by ablation. The existing literature provides evidence for both hypotheses. A study using spectral analysis showed that the frequency (ie, the cycle length) of the AT that resulted after AF termination matched that of a spectral component that was already present in the baseline periodogram during AF.6 A follow-up study revealed that when linear ablation resulted in complete conduction block, it was accompanied by a decrease in the prevalence of these spectral components.7 These findings suggest that site-specific ATs may be present during ongoing AF, despite the fact that their frequency is lower than the dominant frequency during AF. These …

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