Abstract

Atrioventricular conduction patterns suggestive of dual A-V nodal pathways have been reported in patients with and without a history of paroxysmal A-V nodal re-entrant tachycardia (PSVT). The purpose of this study was to determine whether significant association exists between this conduction pattern and the occurrence of PSVT in man. The pattern of A-V conduction was evaluated at similar pacing rates in 13 patients with documented PSVT and 135 patients with PSVT. Patients without PSVT were divided into groups with normal PR intervals (106 patients), PR intervals of 120 msec. or less (12 patients), and PR intervals of 200 msec. or greater (17 patients). Evidence of dual A-V nodal pathways was found in seven of 13 patients with PSVT and nine of 135 patients without PSVT, including eight of 106 patients with normal PR intervals, none of 12 patients with short PR intervals, and one of 17 patients with PR intervals of 200 msec. or greater. The incidence of dual A-V nodal pathways was significantly greater (P less than 0.01) in patients with PSVT when compared with all other groups. In two of four patients with PSVT, propranolol was found to unmask evidence of dual pathways; no evidence of dual pathways was produced by propranolol in 23 patients without PSVT. The data show that the pattern of dual A-V nodal pathways is common only in patients with PSVT and is significantly less frequent in patients without PSVT regardless of the presence of short or long PR intervals. The results of this study establish a strong association between this conduction pattern and the occurrence of PSVT in man.

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