
Why a Sawtooth? Inferences on the Generation of the Flutter Wave during Typical Atrial Flutter Drawn from Radiofrequency Ablation
Author(s) -
Bernstein Neil E.,
Sandler David A.,
Goh Mark,
Feigenblum David Y.,
Holmes Douglas S.,
Chinitz Larry A.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
annals of noninvasive electrocardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.494
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1542-474X
pISSN - 1082-720X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1542-474x.2004.94576.x
Subject(s) - atrial flutter , medicine , sawtooth wave , cardiology , flutter , ablation , sinus rhythm , electrocardiography , p wave , orthodromic , qrs complex , atrial fibrillation , electrophysiology , mechanics , physics , aerodynamics , computer science , computer vision
Background: Typical atrial flutter (AFL) is a macroreentrant arrhythmia characterized by a counterclockwise circuit that passes through the cavotricuspid isthmus with passive depolarization of the left atrium. These electrical events are thought to be responsible for the classic “sawtooth” wave of atrial flutter seen on the surface electrocardiogram characterized by a gradual downward deflection followed by a sharp negative deflection. It has been suggested that the negative flutter wave is a result of passive depolarization of the left atrium. We hypothesized that interruption of the circuit within the isthmus would prevent the reentrant wave from depolarizing the left atrium thus eliminating the component of the electrocardiogram reflecting left atrial depolarization. Methods: We examined 100 cases of atrial flutter with the typical “sawtooth” pattern referred for radiofrequency ablation. Ninety‐seven of the 100 were successfully ablated. All cases were reviewed for termination of atrial flutter with the last intracardiac electrogram just lateral to the site of linear ablation and surface flutter wave at the moment of termination not obscured by the QRS segment or the T‐wave. Seventeen of the 97 met these criteria. Results: Seventeen of the 17 cases demonstrated a gradual negative deflection as the last discernible wave of atrial activity followed by an isoelectric period and resumption of normal sinus rhythm. The last generated wave lacked the sharp negative downstroke. Conclusion: These results suggest that the sharp negative deflection of flutter waves likely correlates with the wavefront's penetration of the interatrial septum and passive depolarization of the left atrium.