Abstract

To examine the characteristics of Haïssaguerre's slow potential (SP) specific to effective catheter ablation of the slow pathway in AV nodal reentrant tachycardia, the properties of SP and its recording site were analyzed in 52 patients who underwent successful SP-guided ablation. The properties of SP included the ratio of the amplitude of SP to that of atrial potential (A)(SP/A), the SP duration, the interval between His-bundle potential (HP) and SP (HP-SP), the interval between A and SP (A-SP), the interval between SP and ventricular potential (V) (SP-V), and the ratio of A-SP to the interval between A and the V (A-SP/A-V). The SP recording site was determined by the ratio of the amplitude of A to that of V (A/V) and by the relative position of the ablation catheter on X ray (right anterior oblique projection), expressed as the ratio of the distance between the coronary sinus ostium and SP site to that between the coronary sinus ostium and HP recording site (relative SP position). Twenty-eight slow pathways were ablated with a single energy application, while the other 24 required applications > or = 2. In all successful applications, SP/A, SP duration, HP-SP, A-SP, SP-V, A-SP/A-V, A/V, and relative SP position were 51% +/- 25%, 28 +/- 5 ms, -11 +/- 9 ms, 57 +/- 25 ms, 68 +/- 13 ms, 46% +/- 9%, 15% +/- 13%, and 51% +/- 13%, respectively. A significant correlation was observed between the relative SP position and A-SP, and between the relative SP position and A-SP/A-V (r = 0.60 and 0.37, respectively), while it was not between the relative SP position and HP-SP, nor between the relative SP position and SP-V. When the characteristics of SP were comparatively analyzed between the effective and ineffective applications in 24 patients in whom applications > or = 2 were required, there was no difference observed in HP-SP, A-SP, SP-V, A-SP/A-V, and A/V. However, SP/A, SP duration, and the relative SP position in the effective applications were all greater than those in the ineffective ones (56% +/- 20% vs 35% +/- 18%, P < 0.001; 29 +/- 4 vs 26 +/- 5 ms, P < 0.01; and 52% +/- 15% vs 33% +/- 11%, P < 0.001, respectively). These results indicate that SP with an amplitude over a half of A amplitude and recorded at the mid-septum of the tricuspid annulus can be a marker for successful slow pathway ablation. Although the local atrial electrogram appears late as the SP recording site shifts to the lower position, the timing of SP relative to HP and V remained unchanged, suggesting that SP is independent of the local atrial activation.

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