The superior transseptal surgical approach to mitral valve creates slow conduction

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BACKGROUND: Atrial tachycardia is very frequent after mitral valve surgery using the superior transseptal approach.

METHODS: Sixteen patients operated on for mitral valve disease (superior transseptal approach = Group A, n = 9, and left atrial approach = Group B, n = 7) underwent radiofrequency catheter ablation of atrial tachycardia guided by electroanatomic mapping. Twenty-six consecutive patients without previous cardiac surgery with typical atrial flutter served as controls (Group C).

RESULTS: Atrial tachycardia occurred earlier after the operation in Group A than in Group B (median 97 vs 2,159 days, P = 0.003). Typical atrial flutter was the most frequent circuit in all groups (Group A-7 patients, Group B-5 patients, Group C-26 patients). Three patients in Group A developed right atrial incisional tachycardia. Ten of 14 tachycardia circuits (typical atrial flutter, n = 7, incisional tachycardia, n = 3) in Group A depended on the corridor between the right atrial part of the atriotomy and the tricuspid annulus. Slow conduction during typical atrial flutter was detected in this corridor in Group A, but not in the corresponding region in Groups B and C (P < 0.001). The cycle length of typical atrial flutter was longer in Groups A and B than in Group C (mean 283 ms and 282 ms vs 233 ms, P = 0.003). Patients in Group B with typical atrial flutter had larger right atria than patients in Group A or Group C (mean 156 mL vs 96 mL and 113 mL, P = 0.033).

CONCLUSIONS: The superior transseptal incision may predispose to atrial tachycardia by creating slow conduction between the atriotomy and the tricuspid annulus.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftPacing and Clinical Electrophysiology
Vol/bind29
Udgave nummer7
Sider (fra-til)719-26
Antal sider8
ISSN0147-8389
DOI
StatusUdgivet - jul. 2006

ID: 247989013