Abstract

Although a ventriculoatrial interval (VAI) of ≤70 ms is used to distinguish atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia from orthodromic atrioventricular reciprocating tachycardia (AVRT), a VAI of ≤70 ms is sometimes observed in cases of AVRT. The study aimed to evaluate the short VAI that is seen in AVRT and to understand its underlying mechanism. Electrophysiologic studies of 46 consecutive patients with AVRT involving an accessory pathway (AP) were examined retrospectively. AP was right sided in seven patients and left sided in 39. A VAI (interval from QRS onset to the earliest intracardiac atrial electrogram recorded by any mapping catheter during AVRT) ≤70 ms during AVRT (short VAI) was observed in eight patients: six with a left lateral AP and two with a left posteroseptal AP. During AVRT involving a left-sided AP, the QRS-V interval (from the earliest QRS onset to the local ventricular electrogram at a site which showed earliest atrial electrogram recorded from the coronary sinus catheter) was significantly shorter (37 ± 7 ms vs 54 ± 13 ms, P = 0.001) and supernormal conduction (QRS duration or the QRS-V interval shortening by ≥10 ms during AVRT) was more frequently seen (63% vs 6%, P = 0.02) in the short VAI group than in the normal VAI group. Furthermore, these parameters were shown to be determinants for short VAI. A short VAI is sometimes observed during AVRT involving a left-sided AP. The short VAI may be caused by rapid propagation or supernormal conduction between the proximal Purkinje-muscle junction and basal left ventricular myocardium.

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