Title: Supraventricular Tachycardia
1Supraventricular Tachycardia
- Teresa Menendez Hood, MD FACC
- Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas
2Supraventricular Tachycardias
- AV nodal reentry tachycardia
- AV reentry tachycardia - the WPW(Wolff-Parkinson
White) Syndrome - Atrial flutter
- Atrial Fibrillation
- Atrial Tachycardia
- Sinus Tachycardia and Sinus Node Reentry
-
3Atrial Fibrillation
- Unorganized, very rapid electrical foci in the
atria - No contraction of the atria as a whole
- In order to protect the ventricles, the AV node
blocks most of the atrial impulses from
conducting through to the ventricles, thus
protecting the ventricles - Controlled rate ventricular rate lt 100
beats/min - Uncontrolled rate ventricular rate gt 100
beats/min
4Atrial Fibrillation
- Characteristics of atrial fibrillation
- Ventricular rhythm is usually irregularly
irregular - Average ventricular rate is 160 180 beats/min
on no drugs - No P waves seen
- QRS interval is usually normal (narrow)
- If see discrete P wavesthink of MAT
- This clinical scenario is a cardiac or pulmonary
patient in the ICU. Thought to be due to a
hyperadrenergic state and CCB and helpful.
5Atrial Fibrillation
- Control the rate using IV calcium channel
blockers or beta-blockersIV dig does not work - If the A-fib is chronic (gt 48 hours)
- Chemical cardioversion after a period of
anticoagulation - Electrical cardioversion only after
anticoagulation
6Atrial fibrillation accounts for 1/3 of all
patient discharges with arrhythmia as principal
diagnosis.
6 PSVT
6 PVCs
18 Unspecified
4 Atrial Flutter
9 SSS
34 Atrial Fibrillation
8 Conduction Disease
10 VT
3 SCD
2 VF
Data source Baily D. J Am Coll Cardiol.
199219(3)41A.
7Classification of Atrial FibrillationThe 3 Ps
- Permanent - Conversion to sinus rhythm not
possible - Persistent - Capable of being converted to sinus
rhythm - Paroxysmal - Converts spontaneously to sinus
rhythm
Gallagher MM and Camm AJ Clin Cardiol 199720381
8AF Anticoagulation - General Points
- AF most common significant rhythm disorder
- Prevalence 1.5-3 of patients in their
60s 5-7 of patients in their 70s 15 of
patients in their 80s - AF most potent common risk factor for stroke
- Relative risk 5
- Patients with AF can be stratified according to
risk of stroke
Feinberg WM e al. Arch Intern Med 1995155469
Wolf PA et al. Stroke199122983
9AF Anticoagulation - General Points
- Anticoagulation (INR 2.0 - 3.0) can reduce risk
of stroke by 2/3 1,2 - Aspirin has little effect on risk of stroke due
to AF 3
1 Hylek EM and Singer DE. Arch Intern Med
1994120897 2 Hylek EM et al. New Engl J Med
1966335540 3 The Atrial Fibrillation
Investigators. Arch Intern Med 19971571237
10Risk Factors for Stroke in AF
- Risk Factor
- Prior stroke
- Age
- Hypertension
- Diabetes
- Relative Risk (multivariate)
- 2.5
- 1.4 (per decade)
- 1.6
- 1.7
Absolute Risk Age lt 65 years and no risk factors,
lone AF ?1/yr. All others 3.5-8/yr
lowered to 1.5/yr by warfarin
The Atrial Fibrillation Investigators Arch
Intern Med 19941541449
11Elective Cardioversion of AFAnticoagulation
- Cardioversion appears to raise risk of embolism
- 1-5 emboli within hours to weeks
- Anticoagulation well before and after greatly
reduces risk - Standard guideline for electrical or drug
cardioversion - INR 2 - 3 for 3 weeks before and
- INR 2 - 3 for 4 weeks after NSR
- IF AF lt 2 days duration, no anticoagulation
Laupacle A et al. Chest 1995108 Prystowsky EN et
al. Circulation 19961262
12Adequate Rate Control
- At office visits
- Apical (not radial) heart rate (sitting) ? 80 /
min - On 24-hour Holter monitor
- Goal average hourly heart rate ? 80 / min
- Exercise testing
- Inadequate ? 85 age-predicated maximum heart
rate in stage I (Bruce) or 3 min of exercise - Digoxin alone will never control the rate unless
the patient has intrinsic AVN conduction system
disease
13Tachycardia - Induced Cardiomyopathy
- Chronic tachycardia in otherwise structurally
normal heart as the sole cause of developing
ventricular dysfunction - Can follow any chronic cardiac tachyarrhythmia
Fenelon G et al. Pacing Clinical Electrophysiol
19961995
14Preference for Acute Cardioversion
- DC Cardioversion
- i.v. Ibutilide
- Other
- Oral Flecainide
- Oral Propafenone
- i.v. Procainamide
15Preference for Acute Cardioversioni.v. Ibutilide
- QTc ? 460 msec
- Short duration of AF (lt30 days)
- No clinical CHF. K and Mg levels OK
- Anesthesia risk (e.g., COPD)
- Patient preference
- Acute efficacy - flutter (63), fib (31)
- Caution risk of polymorphic VT (8)
Stambler BS, et al. Circulation 1996 941613-1621
16Long term treatment
- Beyond the scope of this talk
- Guided by patient symptoms
- AFFIRM trial did not show any benefit of NORMAL
SINUS RHYTHM versus AFIB with rate control in
patients who had minimal symptoms - Ablation for AFIB is guided by patients symptoms
and drug failures
17Atrial Flutter
- Usually a single, irritable foci in the atria
(right) - AV node protects the ventricles by blocking some
of the atrial impulses (decremental conduction) - P waves take on a sawtooth appearance and are
called F waves or flutter waves - Atrial rhythm and ventricular response are
usually regular - Atrial rate 250-350 beats/min. Ventricular rate
varies depending on the number of impulses the AV
node is blocking - No P waves or PR interval
- QRS normal width or with aberrancy
18Atrial Flutter
- Treatment
- Same as atrial fibrillation but often harder to
slow the ventricular rate - Long term treatment is ablation and NOT drugs!
19RF Ablation of Atrial Flutter
- Atrial flutter involves a macro-reentry circuit
within the right atrium. - Critical areas of conduction within the right
atrium are necessary to sustain atrial flutter. - RF ablation of conduction within such critical
sites (most commonly the inferior vena
cava-tricuspid valve isthmus) abolishes atrial
flutter in 85 of cases.
Cosio FG. Am J Cardiol. 199371705-709.
20Diagram of Atrial Flutter Circuit Within Right
Atrium
Inferior vena cava - tricuspid valve isthmus
Cosio FG. Am J Cardiol. 199371705-709.
21Differential Diagnosis ofWide-Complex Tachycardia
- VT
- SVT with aberrancy (atrial fibrillation/flutter)-i
.e. BB Block - Antidromic AV reentry i.e. antegrade via WPW
accessory pathway - Atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, atrial
tachycardia, or AV nodal reentry in setting of
WPW with rapid conduction down accessory pathway
that is activated as a bystander-I.e. not an
integral part of the circuit.
22Narrow QRS
Wide QRS - BBB(Aberrant conduction)
AVN
A
B
HB
RB
LB
Wide QRS - VT
Wide QRS - Preexcitation(Conduction via AP)
C
D
Akhtar M. InZipes and Jalife. Cardiac
Electrophysiology from Cell to Bedside. 1990636.
23Key ECG Signs
- Atrial activity
- QRS configuration
- R-R cycle length
- Aberrant ventricular conduction
- Response to vagal maneuvers
24An EKG you will see on the Boards..
- This has been on every Board exam I have ever
taken. Please do give AVN blockers for this!When
in doubt, treat as if you thought this was VT.
25Atrial Fibrillation with Preexcitation
26Electrocardiographic Differentiation of VT vs.
SVT with Aberrancy
- Clinical history if the patient has had an MI
in the past?it is VT until proven otherwise - AV dissociation
- QRS morphology
- QRS axis
- Fusion beat
- Capture beat
27A-V Dissociation, Fusion, and Capture Beats in VT
V1
E
F
C
ECTOPY
FUSION
CAPTURE
Fisch C. Electrocardiography of Arrhythmias.
1990134.
28ECG Distinction of VT from SVT with Aberrancy
- Favors VT Favors SVT with Aberrancy
Duration RBBB QRS gt 0.14 sec. lt 0.14
sec. LBBB QRS gt 0.16 sec. lt 0.16 sec. Axis QRS
axis -90 to 180 Normal
29ECG Distinction of VT from SVT with Aberrancy
- Favors VT Favors SVT with Aberrancy
Morphology Precordial concordance If LBBB V1
duration gt 30 ms S wave gt 70 ms S wave notched
or slurred V6 qR or QR R wave If
RBBB V1 monophasic R wave qR If triphasic,
R gt R1 R lt R1 V6 R lt S
30Sinus Tachycardia
- Sinus node is still the pacemaker, but the rate
is accelerated for some physiologic reason - Rhythm is regular
- Rate gt 100 beats/minute
- P wave, PR interval, and QRS complex are all
normal - Can look like Sinus Node Reentry paroxysmal and
less than 160 BPM incidence of 10 of all PSVTs
31Sinus Tachycardia
- Treatment
- Alleviate the underlying cause-anemia, pheo,
hyperthyroid - Could be inappropriate ST- a type of autonomic
dysfunction with HR consistently above 120
32Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia
- Repeated episodes of tachycardia with an abrupt
onset and ending (paroxysmal) - SVT is usually due to a reentry mechanism.
- Could also be to abnormal automaticity or
triggered activity but would have more of a
warm-up and cool-down effect.
33Supraventricular Tachycardia
- Characteristics
- Rhythm is regular
- Rate 140-220 beats/minute
- P waves may be buried in the QRS or the T wave
and may differ in morphology from sinus P waves - PR and QRS interval may be normal or prolonged.
34Supraventricular Tachycardia
- Long term treatment is with ablation in most
cases - Response to vagal maneuvers is helpful
- Acutely meds used to decrease the rate or
convert the patient to NORMAL SINUS RHYTHM
Adenosine, IV Verapamil or Esmolol - If patient is unstable
- Electrical cardioversion
35Pearls
- ST depression is common during SVT and is not a
marker of serious ischemia - If the first dose of Adenosine does not work?
Then add 6mg to the amount and give again
(6-12-18)do not repeat the same dose. (If given
via central line then 3-6-9-12) - Adenosine may put the patient in AFBbe ready to
cardiovert.
36Classification of PSVT
- Short R-P
- AVRT(slow-fast)
- AVNRT
- Long R-P
- Atypical forms of the AVNRT (fast-slow)or
AVRT(usually will have a negative P wave in
2,3,avf) - Most atrial tachycardias, SNRT
- PJRT
37Atrial Tachycardia
- Reentry, Automaticity and Triggered (rare)
Activity have been found as causes - Rates 120 to 150
- Usually 11 AVN conduction and persistence
despite AV block - Usually from right atria (Ring of Fire)
- Can be seen as an incisional tachycardia from
previous surgery..i.e. ASD repair - May see remission in children so do not attempt
ablation until adulthood.
38AVN reentry
- Most common from of PSVT
- Can occur at any age and more common in women
- Typical form is down the slow and up the fast
pathway in the AVN region. - Adenosine is the drug on choice for conversion.
Need to be careful about pts with reactive airway
disease and those on persantine. It may not work
in pts with theophylline.
39WPW
- Pre-excitation affects 3/1000 patients on routine
screening.not all develop PSVT - Antegrade (delta wave) and retrograde conduction
- More common in men
- Most present in young adulthood
- 15 incidence of AFIB
- Multiple pathways in 10