Abstract

Repolarization abnormalities on surface electrocardiograms have been described after loss of ventricular preexcitation in some patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. Radiofrequency catheter ablation of overt accessory pathways provides a unique opportunity to study this phenomenon. In this study, serial electrocardiograms were obtained before and after radiofrequency ablation of manifest accessory pathways in 19 patients, of concealed accessory pathways in 6 and after radiofrequency atrioventricular nodal modification in 12. Seven patients undergoing manifest right-sided accessory pathway ablation had left superior frontal plane T-wave axis deviations after ablation (−42 ± 13 °). No patient with a manifest left-sided or concealed accessory pathway, or atrioventricular nodal modification had T-wave abnormalities after ablation; however, left anterior fascicular block and incomplete right bundle branch block each occurred in 1 patient with left accessory pathway ablation. Repolarization abnormalities observed after ablation were similar to T-wave abnormalities during the absence of preexcitation before ablation and persisted up to 5 weeks after the procedure. Patients with repolarization abnormalities after ablation had significantly longer preexcited QRS durations than those without such changes, suggesting that the initial contribution of the pathway to ventricular activation is an important determinant of T-wave changes after ablation. The proposed mechanism for repolarization abnormalities after ablation is the phenomenon of T-wave “memory”.

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