Effects of High-Frequency Atrial Pacing in Atypical Atrial Flutter and Atrial Fibrillation

Atypical atrial flutter has, hitherto, been relatively refractory totermination by rapid atrial pacing. High-frequency pacing (HFP) in theatrium, for termination of atrial flutter or atrial fibrillation (AF), andthe electrophysiologic effects related to it have not been examined. Weexamined the clinical efficacy, safety, and electrophysiologic mechanisms ofHFP using 50-Hz bursts at 10 mA applied at the high right atrium in patientswith atypical atrial flutter (group 1) or AF (group 2), using a prospectiverandomized study protocol. Four burst durations (500, 1000, 2000, and 4000ms) were applied at the high right atrium repetitively in random sequence in22 patients with spontaneous atrial flutter or AF. Local and distant rightand left atrial electrogram recordings were analyzed during and after HFP.HFP resulted in local and distant right and left atrial electrogramacceleration in 8 of 10 patients (80%) in group 1 but caused lessfrequent local atrial electrogram acceleration (6 of 12 patients) and nodistant atrial electrogram effects in group 2 (p < .05 versus group 1).The HFP protocol was effective in arrhythmia termination in 6 of 10patients in group 1 but in no patient in group 2 (p < .05 versus group1). Standard HFP protocol applied at the high right atrium can frequentlyalter atrial activation in both atria and can terminate atypical atrialflutter. Efficacy in AF is limited, probably due to limitedelectrophysiologic actions beyond the local pacing site.

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