Abstract

The exact site of reentrant circuit involved in the atrioventricular node reentrant tachycardia was questioned. Seven patients (6 females and 1 male), aged 21 to 64 years (mean = 40 ± 17 years), with refractory nodal reentry, underwent surgical treatment. The associated cardiac diseases included rheumatic valvar disease in two and an atrial septal defect. Electrophysiologic studies before surgery showed dual nodal pathways in 4 patients. Right atrial endocardial mapping was performed and the earliest retrograde atrial activation during tachycardia was mapped to the apex of the triangle of Koch in 6 patients and near the orifice of coronary sinus in one. Perinodal dissection was performed according to the location of earliest retrograde atrial activity. Care was taken to preserve as much of the atrioventricular node and its arterial supply as was possible. Immediately after surgery, conduction in an antegrade direction recovered and the tachycardia could no longer be reproduced. There was no surgical mortality or morbidity. At 10 to 26 months of follow-up, all patients remain free of tachycardia without antiarrhythmic drrgs. Four patients underwent repeated electrophysiologic studies at 2 weeks to 6 months after surgery. Dual nodal pathways were no longer demonstrated. It is concluded that the perinodal atrial tissue plays a part in the atrioventricular nodal reentry, and that surgical dissection is a simple and effective treatment for patients with refractory atrioventricular node reentrant tachycardia.

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