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Clinical Trial
. 1997 Oct 21;96(8):2505-8.
doi: 10.1161/01.cir.96.8.2505.

Simplified electrophysiologically directed catheter ablation of recurrent common atrial flutter

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Simplified electrophysiologically directed catheter ablation of recurrent common atrial flutter

D C Shah et al. Circulation. .

Abstract

Background: Despite verification of bidirectional conduction block after radiofrequency (RF) catheter ablation in the inferior vena cava (IVC)-tricuspid annulus (TA) isthmus, recurrence of common atrial flutter is relatively common. Although complete linear reablation is usually performed, we evaluated a simplified electrophysiological strategy selectively targeting recovered conducting isthmus tissue.

Methods and results: Twenty-one patients (18 men and 3 women, age, 54+/-10 years) with a recurrence of typical atrial flutter 6+/-7 months after an apparently successful catheter ablation in the IVC-TA isthmus prospectively underwent electrophysiologically targeted reablation during flutter. Sites with narrow electrograms or fractionated electrograms interposed between adjacent sites with double potentials considered to represent gaps were ablated without movement of the catheter. Mapping showed that 18 of 21 patients had a single gap. Successful ablation required a single application in 14 patients and, in the group as a whole, a median of one application (mean, 2+/-2; range, 1 to 11) with resultant bidirectional block in 13 of 16. A single narrow electrogram (duration, 48+/-6 ms; amplitude, 0.1+/-0.05 mV) was noted at the successful site in 11, whereas a fractionated electrogram (97+/-32 ms, 0.05+/-0.04 mV, P<.05) was noted in 9. There were four additional recurrences during a follow-up at 7+/-5 months; three were similarly ablated with a median of one pulse.

Conclusions: Transmural ablation lesions in the isthmus can be recognized during flutter by double potentials separated by an isoelectric interval. Postablation recurrent flutter is usually due to a single discrete recovered gap; this is represented by a single or a fractionated potential spanning the isoelectric interval of adjacent double potentials, which can be selectively targeted to minimize repeat ablation.

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