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Heart Rhythm ; 2024 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38942105

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The concealed nodoventricular/nodofascicular (NV/NF) pathway is mostly a bystander, retrograde bypass tract connecting right ventricle/right bundle branch (RBB) and slow pathway (SP), which is observed in patients with atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT). However, its prevalence and characteristics in response to pacing maneuvers have not been fully evaluated. OBJECTIVE: This study investigated the prevalence and characteristics of AVNRT with a bystander NV/NF-pathway. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed 153 consecutive patients undergoing catheter ablation of AVNRT. Excluding 52 patients with inadequate electrophysiological data, 101 patients composed the study population. RESULTS: Three patients (3.0%) had bystander concealed NV/NF-pathways, all of which were connected to the SP. The tachycardia was typical SP/fast pathway (FP) AVNRT in two patients and atypical FP/SP AVNRT in one patient. In all cases, His-refractory ventricular extra stimuli (VESs) reset the AVNRTs with delay through the NV/NF-pathways. Ventricular overdrive pacing (VOP) in the early-phase also reset the AVNRT with delay. Earlier VESs and middle-phase of VOP did not reset the tachycardia, and further earlier VESs and late-phase of VOP reset the tachycardia with advance through the RBB-His conduction. CONCLUSION: A bystander NV/NF-pathway was not rare in patients with AVNRT. The VESs and VOP for the AVNRTs with the bystander NV/NF-pathways were characterized by the two-phase resetting phenomenon: initial transient resetting with delay through the NV/NF-pathway, and late resetting with advance through the RBB-His conduction.

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