Prevalence, Characteristics, Mapping, and Catheter Ablation of Potential Rotors in Nonparoxysmal Atrial Fibrillation

BACKGROUND—Identification of critical atrial substrates in patients with nonparoxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) failing to respond to pulmonary vein isolation is important. This study investigated the signal characteristics, substrate nature, and ablation results of rotors during AF. METHODS AND RES...

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Veröffentlicht in:Circulation. Arrhythmia and electrophysiology 2013-10, Vol.6 (5), p.851-858
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Yenn-Jiang, Lo, Men-Tzung, Lin, Chen, Chang, Shih-Lin, Lo, Li-Wei, Hu, Yu-Feng, Hsieh, Wan-Hsin, Chang, Hung-Yu, Lin, Wen-Yu, Chung, Fa-Po, Liao, Jo-Nan, Chen, Yun-Yu, Hanafy, Dicky, Huang, Norden E, Chen, Shih-Ann
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND—Identification of critical atrial substrates in patients with nonparoxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) failing to respond to pulmonary vein isolation is important. This study investigated the signal characteristics, substrate nature, and ablation results of rotors during AF. METHODS AND RESULTS—In total, 53 patients (age=55±8), 31 with persistent AF and 22 with long-lasting AF, underwent pulmonary vein isolation and substrate modification of complex fractionated atrial electrograms. Small-radius-reentrant rotors were identified from signal analyses of the dominant frequency and fractionation interval and nonlinear analyses (newly developed, beat-to-beat nonlinear measurement of the repetitiveness of the electrogram morphology >6 seconds). In 15% of the patients, activation maps demonstrated occurrences of rotor-like small-radius reentrant circuits (n=9; 1.1 per patient; cycle length=110±21 ms; diameter=11±6 mm) with fibrillation occurring outside these areas. Rotors were identified by conventional point-by-point mapping and signal analyses and were subsequently eradicated by catheter ablation in these patients. Persistent AF for
ISSN:1941-3149
1941-3084
DOI:10.1161/CIRCEP.113.000318