Abstract

A left common pulmonary vein (LCPV) is the most common anatomical variation in the pulmonary vein (PV) and often influences strategies of PV isolation for atrial fibrillation (AF). Our objective was to elucidate the electrical properties of the specific shape of LCPV and to apply it to an ablation procedure. We investigated consecutive 12 out of 204 paroxysmal AF patients who had the shape of a straight common trunk in LCPV defined by the formation of a single conduit with parallel cranial and caudal walls after the coalescence of superior and inferior PVs on the distal side. The distance between the top of the bifurcation of LPVs and the level coinciding with the middle of the anterior wall of LCPV (left lateral ridge: LLR) was more than 10mm in all the patients. The activation pattern of the LLR showed longitudinal conduction without outside connections. All the LCPV except one were successfully isolated without ablating the LLR (C-shape ablation). Only one patient had AF recurrence during the follow-up period. The LLR in LCPV with a straight common trunk has longitudinal conduction without outside connections, which permits the isolation of LCPV without ablating LLR.

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