Back to Search Start Over

Temporal Stability of Rotors and Atrial Activation Patterns in Persistent Human Atrial Fibrillation

Authors :
Prashanthan Sanders
Peter M. Kistler
Victoria Atkinson
Gwilym M. Morris
Alistair Royse
Phillip Antippa
Joseph B. Morton
Geoffrey Lee
Steven J. Spence
Tomos E. Walters
Jonathan M. Kalman
Michael O’Keefe
John Goldblatt
Marco Larobina
Source :
JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology. 1:14-24
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Objectives This study aimed to determine the spatiotemporal stability of rotors and other atrial activation patterns over 10 min in longstanding, persistent AF, along with the relationship of rotors to short cycle-length (CL) activity. Background The prevalence, stability, and mechanistic importance of rotors in human atrial fibrillation (AF) remain unclear. Methods Epicardial mapping was performed in 10 patients undergoing cardiac surgery, with bipolar electrograms recorded over 10 min using a triangular plaque (area: 6.75 cm 2 ; 117 bipoles; spacing: 2.5 mm) applied to the left atrial posterior wall (n = 9) and the right atrial free wall (n = 4). Activations were identified throughout 6 discrete 10-s segments of AF spanning 10 min, and dynamic activation mapping was performed. The distributions of 4,557 generated activation patterns within each mapped region were compared between the 6 segments. Results The dominant activation pattern was the simultaneous presence of multiple narrow wave fronts (26%). Twelve percent of activations represented transient rotors, seen in 85% of mapped regions with a median duration of 3 rotations. A total of 87% were centered on an area of short CL activity ( Conclusions In patients with longstanding, persistent AF, activation patterns are spatiotemporally stable over 10 min. Transient rotors can be demonstrated in the majority of mapped regions, are spatiotemporally associated with short CL activity, and, when recurrent, demonstrate anatomical determinism.

Details

ISSN :
2405500X
Volume :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a4c663e385b17ec9eea4d80eedf7cebf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacep.2015.02.012