Abstract

Orthodromic tachycardia is the most common arrhythmia in patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. It is often initiated during incremental ventricular pacing that requires the onset of retrograde block along the normal pathway (that is, atrioventricular [AV] node-His-Purkinje system) with concomitant retrograde atrial activation by way of the accessory pathway. However, the site of retrograde block, that is, the AV node versus the His-Purkinje system, during incremental ventricular pacing and, hence, the mechanism of orthodromic tachycardia initiation have not been systematically elucidated. The mechanisms of orthodromic tachycardia induction were studied in 17 patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome using a specially designed pacing protocol. A beat by beat analysis indicated that the retrograde His-Purkinje system block was the most common initiating mechanism of orthodromic tachycardia in 14 of the 17 cases. In two cases, AV node block preceded the onset of orthodromic tachycardia, whereas the data in the remaining case suggested that both mechanisms were operative but at different pacing cycle lengths. The orthodromic tachycardia induction with His-Purkinje system block occurred within the first two cycles in most cases. When orthodromic tachycardia initiation was delayed beyond the first two cycles of the ventricular train it represented either a 2:1 block in the His-Purkinje system; a linking phenomenon in the His-Purkinje system; or a block in the AV node. These data have methodologic, mechanistic and therapeutic implications for patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome.

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