[Bouveret's tachycardia]
- PMID: 11338462
[Bouveret's tachycardia]
Abstract
In 1889, in an age preceding the invention of the electrocardiogram, a physician working in the hospitals of Lyon published a remarkable paper on essential paroxysmal tachycardia, of which Bristowe in England and Huppert in Germany had already spoken. The study described 12 cases (including 3 personal cases) of essential paroxysmal tachycardia and 6 secondary tachycardias. They were not all benign, there being 4 deaths out of the 12 cases. From this period on, the term "Bouveret's tachycardia" has been used in France and, with the advances in rhythmology, some have assimilated it to paroxysmal nodal tachycardia. In fact, many forms of paroxysmal essential tachycardia have been recognised at atrial (nodal tachycardia, accessory pathway tachycardia, idiopathic atrial flutter and fibrillation) and ventricular levels (benign or ventricular Bouveret's tachycardia). This is an occasion to review the variety of clinical medicine in the accuracy of a rhythmological diagnosis without forgetting that the electrocardiogram is essential when the recordings are analysable. The term of Bouveret's tachycardia should be retained but, before electrocardiographic analysis, it englobes all paroxysmal tachycardia occurring in healthy hearts, and not only paroxysmal nodal tachycardia.