Abstract

Little is known about the shortening of atrial refractoriness as a result of electrical remodeling in atrial fibrillation (AF) in clinical cases, especially in terms of long-term follow-up, because of a lack of noninvasive testing methods. The present study population comprised 38 consecutive patients with persistent AF (PAF, >1 month). Before and after the follow-up period of 1-14 months, surface ECGs were recorded for analysis. In each case, the fibrillation wave was purified by subtracting the QRS-T complex template and then power spectral analysis was performed. The mean fibrillation cycle length (FCL) and FCL coefficient of variation (FCL-CV) were determined from peak power frequency in 20 epochs in each recording. The change in FCL (FCL) was calculated by subtracting the baseline FCL from the FCL after the follow-up period. To correct for the difference in the follow-up period, DeltaFCL was divided by the follow-up period in each case. In 38 cases, mean FCL decreased from 160+/-20 ms to 151+/-19 ms (p<0.05), and the FCL-CV also decreased from 15+/-9% to 12+/-5% (p<0.05). The corrected DeltaFCL was -2.4+/-7.6 (ms/month) and there was a significant negative correlation between corrected DeltaFCL and baseline FCL (p<0.01). Shortening of the FCL during a relatively long-term follow-up period was observed in patients with PAF.

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