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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 56, 337-342, Copyright © 1993 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
S Yamauchi, RB Schuessler, T Kawamoto, TA Shuman, JP Boineau and JL Cox
The purpose of this study was to develop a surgical treatment for atrial
flutter using intraoperative activation sequence mapping to minimize the
surgical procedure necessary to ablate the flutter. A canine model (n = 10)
of left atrial enlargement was developed by creating a shunt from the left
subclavian artery to the left superior pulmonary vein. Sustained atrial
flutter was easily induced in this model. The flutter consisted of a single
reentrant circuit that rotated around one or two anatomic obstacles linked
by a region of functional block. Epicardial templates, consisting of 252
bipolar electrodes, were used to record activation time maps. After
localization of the reentrant circuit, surgical incisions were placed to
interrupt the pathways. In all 10 animals, flutter could be induced and
intraoperative mapping localized the reentrant circuit. Seven circuits were
in the right atrium and three were in the left atrium. The operation
ablated all of the preoperative circuits. However, in 5 of the animals,
flutter originating from a new circuit could be induced. Activation
sequence mapping before and after operation demonstrates that there are
multiple potential reentrant pathways in this canine model of atrial
flutter. Therefore, all potential pathways must be surgically interrupted
to prevent inducibility of atrial flutter.
ARTICLES
Use of intraoperative mapping to optimize surgical ablation of atrial flutter
Department of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110.
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