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      Atrial activation during chronic atrial fibrillation in patients with isolated mitral valve disease.

      The Annals of thoracic surgery
      Adult, Aged, Atrial Fibrillation, complications, physiopathology, Chronic Disease, Electrocardiography, Female, Heart Atria, innervation, Heart Conduction System, Humans, Intraoperative Period, Male, Middle Aged, Mitral Valve Insufficiency, surgery, Mitral Valve Stenosis, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted

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          Abstract

          A computerized 32-channel mapping system has been developed to investigate the characteristics of the atrial activation sequence. The system is capable of displaying sequential atrial maps and provides a rapid and dynamic means of verifying the activation sequence of atrial fibrillation. Using this system, we performed intraoperative atrial activation mapping in 10 patients with chronic atrial fibrillation who were undergoing isolated mitral valve operations. Regular and repetitive activation (cycle length ranged from 131 to 228 milliseconds) originated in the left atrium in all 10 patients. Two patterns of repetitive activation in 2 patients and three patterns in 1 patient appeared alternately during the observation period in the left atrium. In contrast to the repetitive activation in the left atrium, the activation sequence of the right atrium was extremely complex and chaotic. In 7 of the 10 patients, the same pattern of right atrial activation was never repeated during the observation period. In 2 patients, revolution of repetitive activation in the right atrium sporadically appeared, but the pattern of activation immediately deteriorated to a complex and chaotic pattern. In 1 patient, repetitive activation emerged from the low lateral portion of the right atrium. Because our mapping technique was limited by the number of available atrial electrodes, discrete reentrant circuits or ectopic foci could not be demonstrated in the present study. However, the activation sequences during chronic atrial fibrillation suggested that (1) the left atrium would act as an electrical driving chamber for atrial fibrillation in the majority of the patients and (2) atrial activation patterns are different in each case. Computerized intraoperative mapping should guide surgeons in determining the appropriate surgical procedure and facilitate operation for chronic atrial fibrillation associated with mitral valve disease.

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