Date of download: 7/2/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Recognition of far-field electrograms during entrainment.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Date of download: 5/27/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: ACC/AHA/ESC guidelines for the management of patients.
Advertisements

Date of download: 5/28/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Left atrial tachycardia after circumferential pulmonary.
Date of download: 5/28/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Separating Atrial Flutter From Atrial Fibrillation.
Date of download: 5/30/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Auditory stimuli as a trigger for arrhythmic events.
Date of download: 5/31/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: The Role of Ganglionated Plexi in Apnea-Related.
Date of download: 6/1/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Safety and efficacy of advanced atrial pacing therapies.
Date of download: 6/3/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Local Depolarization Abnormalities Are the Dominant.
Date of download: 6/17/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Ablation of electrograms with an isolated, delayed.
Date of download: 6/18/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: The V2 Transition Ratio: A New Electrocardiographic.
Date of download: 6/18/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Entrainment mapping and radiofrequency catheter.
Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Body surface mapping of counterclockwise and clockwise.
Date of download: 6/22/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Separating non-isthmus- from isthmus-dependent atrial.
Date of download: 6/22/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Global distribution of atrial ectopic foci triggering.
Date of download: 6/25/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Mechanism, localization and cure of atrial arrhythmias.
Date of download: 6/26/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Mechanism and Location of Atrial Flutter in Transplanted.
Date of download: 6/27/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Repetitive monomorphic ventricular tachycardia originating.
Date of download: 6/29/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Giant T–U Waves Precede Torsades de Pointes in Long.
Date of download: 6/30/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Determination of refractory periods and conduction.
Date of download: 7/5/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Validation of the Noncontact Mapping System in the.
Date of download: 7/5/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Ventricular Arrhythmia After Cardiac Surgery: Incidence,
Date of download: 7/6/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Catheter-induced linear lesions in theleft atrium.
Date of download: 7/6/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: First Human Demonstration of Cardiac Stimulation.
Date of download: 7/7/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Human atrial repolarization: effects of sinus rate,
Date of download: 7/7/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Endocardial and Epicardial Repolarization Alternans.
Date of download: 7/11/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Movement of the Esophagus During Left Atrial Catheter.
Date of download: 7/11/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Electrogram polarity reversal as an additional indicator.
Date of download: 9/18/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Different patterns of atrial activation in idiopathic.
Date of download: 9/18/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: A Novel SCN5A Gain-of-Function Mutation M1875T Associated.
Date of download: 9/18/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Characteristics of electrograms recorded at reentry.
Date of download: 9/19/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Noncontact three-dimensional mapping and ablation.
Date of download: 9/19/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Atrial Tachycardia After Circumferential Pulmonary.
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages (January 2007)
Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol
Lilian Mantziari et al. JACEP 2015;1:
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages (January 2012)
Takekuni Hayashi et al. JACEP 2016;2:27-35
Fu Siong Ng et al. JACEP 2016;j.jacep
Jong Sung Park et al. JACEP 2016;2:
Philippe Maury et al. JACEP 2016;2:
Pugazhendhi Vijayaraman et al. JACEP 2015;1:
Incessant bundle branch reentrant ventricular tachycardia in a patient with corrected transposition of the great arteries  Ken Kato, MD, Daigo Yagishita,
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages (January 2014)
HeartRhythm Case Reports
Peri–coronary sinus atrial flutter associated with prior slow pathway ablation  Mitsunori Maruyama, MD, PhD, FHRS, Shunsuke Uetake, MD, PhD, Yasushi Miyauchi,
A case of scar-related ventricular tachycardia demonstrating termination with nonglobal capture at the site of concealed entrainment with dual slow conduction.
Catheter ablation of atypical flutter using new 3-dimensional electroanatomic mapping software focusing on areas of conduction block  Camilla Asferg,
Limitations of 12-lead electrocardiogram wide complex tachycardia algorithms in a patient with left atrial flutter and large myocardial infarction  Carlos.
Dual-loop biatrial concomitant macroreentrant tachycardia in a patient without previous history of surgery or ablation  Song-Yun Chu, MD, Li-Bin Shi,
Perimitral atrial flutter associated with a protected coronary sinus after a Maze IV procedure and concomitant mitral annulus repair  Gaku Kanda, MD,
Microreentrant left atrial tachycardia circuit mapped with an ultra-high-density mapping system  Fu Siong Ng, MRCP, PhD, Fernando Guerrero, BSc, Vishal.
Isolation of the conduction between the Marshall bundle and distal coronary sinus and the entire coronary sinus for an atrial tachycardia after catheter.
Bradley D. Brochu, MD, Ahmed Abdi-Ali, MD, Jeffrey Shaw, MD, F
Multiple monomorphic ventricular tachycardias in a structurally normal heart: A case report  Daljeet Kaur Saggu, MD, DM, Mandar Shah, MD, DNB, Abhijeet.
Pseudo-conduction block at the mitral isthmus in a patient with epicardial impulse propagation through the vein of Marshall  Rintaro Hojo, MD, Seiji Fukamizu,
Single-catheter validation of bidirectional block during atrial flutter ablation  Piotr Futyma, MD, Marian Futyma, MD, PhD, Konrad Dudek, MD, Piotr Kułakowski,
Macroreentrant form of an adenosine 5′-triphosphate–sensitive atrial tachycardia arising from the vicinity of the atrioventricular node involving the.
Paroxysmal 1:1 narrow complex tachycardia: What is the mechanism?
Tina Baykaner, MD, MPH, Joshua M. Cooper, MD, FHRS 
Samuel H. Baldinger, MD, Saurabh Kumar, MD, PhD, Alan D
Atrial Tachycardia in a Patient With Fabry’s Disease
Bundle branch reentry: A novel mechanism for sustained ventricular tachycardia in Chagas heart disease  Alvaro V. Sarabanda, MD, PhD, Wagner L. Gali,
Mapping of a postinfarction left ventricular aneurysm–dependent macroreentrant ventricular tachycardia  Elad Anter, MD, Jianqing Li, MD, Cory M. Tschabrunn,
Biatrial flutter circuit involving an anomalous insertion of the Bachmann bundle into the superior vena cava  Ely Gracia, MD, Roger Fan, MD, FHRS  HeartRhythm.
Circular mapping recordings in a persistent left superior vena cava during atrial tachycardia: Was isolation achieved?  Sandrine Venier, MD, Jason G.
A case of an incision-related single-loop intra-atrial reentrant tachycardia showing an eccentric atrial activation sequence and widely separate potentials.
Successful fluoroless ablation of an incessant atypical atrial flutter attributed to AtriClip usage during mini-MAZE surgery for persistent atrial fibrillation 
Colin Yeo, MBBS, Martin S. Green, MD, Girish M
Two apparently remote types of ventricular tachycardia from a single right bundle branch focal source  Jaromír Josiek, MD, Jaroslav Januška, MD, PhD,
Ablation of a symptomatic spontaneous automatic focus arising from an atriofascicular fiber  Sandrine Venier, MD, Paul Khairy, MD, PhD, Bernard Thibault,
Mitsunori Maruyama et al. JACEP 2017;3:
Presentation transcript:

Date of download: 7/2/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Recognition of far-field electrograms during entrainment mapping of ventricular tachycardia J Am Coll Cardiol. 2003;42(1): doi: /S (03) Distinguishing far-field (FFP) and local potentials (LP) from analysis of entrainment (A) or the effect of radiofrequency ablation (B) are shown. In both panels ventricular tachycardia with a cycle length of 550 ms is present. From the top are surface electrocardiogram leads (I, aVF, V1, V6) and bipolar intracardiac electrograms recorded from the distal (Abl D) and proximal (Abl P) electrode pairs of the ablation catheter. Potentials are labeled 1, 2, and 3. Entrainment indicates potential 1 is an FFP. Radiofrequency ablation reduces the amplitude of potential 3 (B) indicating it is an LP, but does not affect potentials 1 and 2. See text for discussion. Time lines are 20 ms. Figure Legend:

Date of download: 7/2/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Recognition of far-field electrograms during entrainment mapping of ventricular tachycardia J Am Coll Cardiol. 2003;42(1): doi: /S (03) Entrainment of ventricular tachycardia (VT) at a site with a double potential is shown. From the top are surface electrocardiogram leads (I, II, III), and bipolar intracardiac electrograms recorded from the distal (Abl D) and proximal (Abl P) electrode pairs of the ablation catheter; VT with a cycle length of 410 ms is present. Pacing at a cycle length of 390 ms entrains tachycardia without altering the QRS morphology (concealed fusion). Recordings at the pacing site show two potentials marked with an asterisk and arrowhead, respectively. During entrainment, the potential marked with the asterisk is present and accelerated to the pacing cycle length. The tissue generating this potential is not directly depolarized by the pacing stimulus and is, therefore, designated as far- field (FFP). The local potential (indicated by an arrowhead) is not discernable during pacing, consistent with direct capture, but reappears after the last stimulus. The true post-pacing interval (PPI) (TPPI), which is measured from the last stimulus to the local potential, is 425 ms. The false PPI (FPPI), which is measured from the last stimulus to the FFP, is 210 ms, or, if measured to the next FFP electrogram one cycle later, would be 620 ms. Radiofrequency ablation at this site abolished tachycardia. Time lines are 20 ms. Figure Legend:

Date of download: 7/2/2016 Copyright © The American College of Cardiology. All rights reserved. From: Recognition of far-field electrograms during entrainment mapping of ventricular tachycardia J Am Coll Cardiol. 2003;42(1): doi: /S (03) The relation between false post-pacing interval (FPPI) determined from the far-field potential (FFP), and the true post-pacing interval (TPPI) for classifying circuit sites are shown. A circuit site is defined as having a TPPI-ventricular tachycardia cycle length difference of ≤30 ms (14). At 12% of the sites where a TPPI >30 ms indicated a bystander site, measurement to the FFP yielded a false PPI-tachycardia cycle length difference ≤30 ms that falsely classified the site as in the reentry circuit. At 44% of sites where the TPPI-tachycardia cycle length difference ≤30 ms classified the site as in the circuit, the FPPI was >30 ms, classifying the site as remote from the circuit. At 44% of the sites, both FPPI and TPPI classified the site as a bystander. Figure Legend: