Abstract

The incidence of dual atrioventricular (AV) nodal physiology was evaluated in 22 patients (14 males, 8 females, age 52 +/- 18 years) undergoing electrophysiology studies for evaluation of ventricular tachycardia/nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (n = 11), supraventricular tachycardia (n = 5), and syncope (n = 6). Patients with AV node reentrant tachycardia were excluded. Thirteen patients had normal left ventricular function and nine patients (seven with coronary artery disease, two with dilated cardiomyopathy) had depressed left ventricular function. Single atrial extrastimuli (A2) were introduced after eight-beat drives at paced cycle lengths of 550 msec and 400 or 450 msec beginning at coupling intervals of 650 and 500 or 550 msec, respectively. The coupling interval was decreased at 10-msec intervals until AV node or atrial refractoriness. A second atrial extrastimulus (A3) was then added. A2 was fixed at 50 msec greater than the atrial or AV nodal refractory period. A3 was coupled to A2 at 650 and 500 or 550 msec and decremented as with single extrastimulation. Dual AV nodal physiology was defined by a 50-msec increase in A2H2 or A3H3 with a 10-msec decrement in the coupling interval or a discontinuous H1H2 versus A1A2 or H2H3 versus A2A3 curve. Using a single extrastimulus, 1 of 22 patients demonstrated dual AV nodal physiology. Using double extrastimuli, an additional four patients with dual AV nodal physiology were identified. The occurrence of dual AV nodal physiology determined using double extrastimuli is increased compared to using only a single extrastimulus (P = 0.03).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full Text
Paper version not known

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