| Literature DB >> 25964112 |
Qi Jin1,2, Steen Pehrson3, Peter Karl Jacobsen4, Xu Chen5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Different atrial arrhythmias can coexist in the recipient and donor atria after heart transplantation. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25964112 PMCID: PMC4443606 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-015-0031-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1Panel A shows a left anterior oblique (LAO) view on a CARTO activation map in the recipient and donor atria. The red color represents the earliest activation. The light blue points represent the sites of 2:1 conduction block at the border zone. The blue points represent the sites with Af activation in the recipient atria. The grey points represent scar areas. In Panel B, only activation mapping of the clinical AFL in the recipient RA is performed. The activations of Af and 2:1 conduction are both tagged only by location (white points). A counterclockwise CTI-dependent AFL is present in this modified activation map. Panel C shows the different activation electrograms of the ablation catheter at the different sites. Location 1 is at six clock relative to the TA. Location 2 and 3 are at the anterior-superior wall and posterior-inferior wall respectively
Fig. 2In Panels A and B, activation mapping from the donor atria indicates an origin of a focal AT at the suture line (border zone, location 1). The red color represents the earliest activation. At this site, radiofrequency current is applied and terminates AT. Red and pink points indicate the ablation areas. The color’s strength represents the duration of ablation delivery. Panel C shows the patient’s sinus rhythm with a cycle length of 800 ms. The ablation catheter at location 2 (anterior-superior wall of the donor atrium) indicates sinus rhythm. Af at the ablation catheter in the recipient atria (blue point, location 3) is not changed, but the two atria are electrically dissociated