Submit manuscript...
Journal of
eISSN: 2373-4396

Cardiology & Current Research

Mini Review Volume 3 Issue 4

Atrial Electrophysiological Modifications Generated by a Single Atrial Premature Contraction

Osmar Antonio Centurión

Cardiology Division, First Department of Internal Medicine, Asunci

Correspondence: Osmar Antonio Centurión, Professor of Medicine, Asunción National University, Cardiology Division, First Department of Internal Medicine, Clinical Hospital, Trejo y Sanabria 1657, Sajonia, Asunción, Paraguay

Received: October 05, 2015 | Published: October 12, 2015

Citation: Centurión OA (2015) Atrial Electrophysiological Modifications Generated by a Single Atrial Premature Contraction. J Cardiol Curr Res 3(4): 00112. DOI: 10.15406/jccr.2015.03.00112

Download PDF

Abbreviations

APC, atrial premature contractions; AF, atrial fibrillation; RAF, repetitive atrial firing; FAA, fragmented atrial activity; ACD, inter-atrial conduction delay

Mini Review

Most of the patients who undergo a Holter ECG ambulatory monitoring study are found to have atrial premature contractions (APC). Although it is not worrisome if the patient has no organic heart disease, it is wise to think that a simple APC can produce changes in atrial electrical conduction that may alter the depolarization pathway in different manners eliciting reentry. The use of programmed atrial stimulation with single atrial extraestimulus was undertaken as a way of understanding the electrophysiological properties of the atrium.1-3 Although this is a procedure that we have been doing for decades, it is always healthy to return to the basics and meditate from the beginning. Furthermore, it is a procedure that has passed the test of time. This mimics in the laboratory what is produced clinically when an APC occurs in the patient.

Since the modifications produced by an APC may be significant in certain patients with altered atrial muscle vulnerability, it is important to concentrate on the electrical changes that a simple APC can induce. With programmed atrial stimulation, we are able to record atrial activation times, atrial conduction intervals, different types of delays in atrial conduction, dispersion of atrial refractoriness, and different kinds of atrial responses that alter atrial electrical conduction paving the way to reentry mechanism for arrhythmia. After a premature atrial beat delivered at a critical coupling interval, several responses, such as repetitive atrial firing, fragmented atrial activity, atrial conduction delay, and atrial fibrillation (AF) can be elicited. Patients with paroxysmal AF not only have been found to have a higher incidence, but also to have significantly wider zones, of these parameters than the control subjects. Therefore, the widening of these zones may be closely related to the spontaneously occurring episodes of AF.1˗5 The abolition or reduction of the zone of these markers of atrial vulnerability by antiarrhythmic agents may indicate the usefulness of a drug in preventing the initiation of AF.

Repetitive atrial firing (RAF) often precedes atrial flutter or degenerates to AF.4˗9 Several clinical studies have demonstrated that RAF is a common finding in patients with paroxysmal AF.4˗6 According to Wyndham et al.,7 RAF is defined as the occurrence of two or more successive atrial complexes with a return cycle of <250 ms and a subsequent cycle length of <300ms. The mechanism of RAF appears to be a local reentry around the point of stimulation in a double circuit "figure-of-eight" pattern, as has been shown in experimental studies that have used a rabbit atrium and an open-chest dog.10 Other mechanisms, such as triggered activity or enhanced automaticity, also have been described as possible mechanisms.11 Atrial premature stimulation seemed to facilitate the induction of RAF both by promoting intra-atrial conduction delays, as well as by shortening the atrial refractory period 5. Shimizu et al.,8 observed that the effective refractory period was significantly shorter at sites where RAF was induced than at sites where it was not induced. RAF reportedly occurred in 94% of the atrial sites with an effective refractory period of <260 m sec and a maximum conduction delay >40msec. These results suggest that the occurrence of RAF requires the presence of a short refractory period at the pacing site and prolongation of the maximum conduction delay.8,12

A single atrial extra stimulus often results in widening of the local atrial electrogram, namely, fragmented atrial activity (FAA). It has been demonstrated that fragmentation and slowing of conduction in response to premature stimulation are related to paroxysmal AF.1,2,13 Fractionated auricular electrograms are recorded from myocardial sites where auricular muscle fibers are widely separated by fibrosis that has resulted from ischemia, inflammation, or degeneration.14 Ohe et al.,1 defined FAA elicited by atrial extra stimuli as the occurrence of disorganized atrial activity >150% of the duration of the local atrial electrogram of the basic beat recorded in the right atrium. The duration of the local atrial electrogram and the induction zone of FAA are greater in patients with PAF than in controls.1,2 Although FAA also is elicited in subjects without paroxysmal AF, the widening of FAA zone is characteristic of paroxysmal AF. FAA may be a good indicator of a tendency to develop spontaneous AF.1 Electrophysiological studies performed in patients with chronic sustained lone AF after electric cardio version also has shown a wider FAA zone than that in controls.3

The slowing of intra-atrial conduction is considered to be one of the most important requirements for the initiation of reentry and, thus, for AF or atrial flutter to develop.2,8 Inter-atrial conduction delay (ACD), measured from the stimulus artifact to the atrial electrogram at the coronary sinus distal level, reflects an actual ACD that is not influenced by local latency at the site of stimulation.8 Hashiba et al.,13 by using a rigid criterion for ACD (the S2 through A2 increments >50msec), found a significantly greater incidence of ACD in patients with paroxysmal AF than in controls. It is important to note that a significantly wider zone of ACD was observed in patients with paroxysmal AF than in controls.2,12

Bi-atrial pacing was developed as a technique of simultaneous activation of the right atrium and left atrium to reduce the ACD.15˗19 This procedure has been reported to prevent the recurrence of AF in paced patients with marked ACD.16 Therefore, these facts indicate that the ACD can play an important role in the onset of AF. On the other hand, controversy has existed for a long time regarding whether AF was due to a single focus firing rapidly or to some sort of reentrant excitation. This arrhythmia might result from some combination of the two. It is now generally accepted that ectopic foci from the pulmonary veins can initiate AF and can also act as drivers for maintaining AF.20˗24 However, not all patients with atrial arrhythmias initiate AF. A substrate for atrial propensity to AF is required for AF initiation and maintenance. AF results from a critical number of simultaneously circulating wavelets, the so-called multiple-wavelet hypothesis proposed by Moe et al.,25 Several investigators were able to record atrial activation times, atrial conduction intervals, different types of delays in atrial conduction, and dispersion of atrial refractoriness. Allessie et al.,26 have provided clear evidence to support the multiple-wavelet hypothesis as the basis of AF by multisite mapping studies with a Langendorff-perfused canine atrial preparation of AF induced by rapid pacing and sustained by acetylcholine infusion.26 They emphasized the importance of a critical number of simultaneously circulating wavelets of the random reentry type and the importance of activation of each atrium by wavelets from the other atrium. On the basis of the pattern of activation obtained by simultaneous multisite mapping during induced AF in human AF, Konings et al.,27 distinguished three types of AF based on activation patterns. In type I, the right atrial free wall was activated by single broad wave fronts propagating without conduction delay. Type II was more complex, showing a higher degree of delayed conduction and intra-atrial conduction block. Type III activation was highly complex, with three or more wavelets associated with areas of slow conduction and conduction block. Moreover, it was suggested that AF might be generated by one or possibly two unstable reentrant circuits of short cycle length.28˗31 There is an interaction in which unstable and short-lived reentrant circuits (mother waves) of short cycle length generate wave fronts (daughter waves), which serve to re-form the unstable reentrant circuits. It is because the unstable reentrant circuits are always generating multiple wave fronts and the wave fronts are continuously re-forming reentrant circuits of short cycle length that AF is maintained in this type of model.29˗32

A better understanding of the mechanism of initiation and maintenance of AF mediated by an APC may provide insights into devising therapeutic strategies for the treatment of AF. Their mapping data may provide new insights into the decision of where anatomically to place the critical incisions or even ablative lesions in patients with paroxysmal AF. Several abnormal responses have been elicited by premature atrial stimulation, including RAF, FAA, and ACD and can develop under a clinical APC. Although these responses do not show the localization and characteristics of reentry circuits, they are found to be closely related to the development and maintenance of AF in predisposed patients. These indicators of atrial vulnerability and their corresponding zones of induction are useful parameters indicative of predisposition to AF. Electrophysiological studies in patients with paroxysmal AF have led to essential understanding of the underlying clinical physio-pathologic process of AF.33˗37 The abnormal responses elicited by a single APC have been observed more frequently in patients prone to develop paroxysmal AF. The specificity, sensitivity, positive and negative predictive values of these abnormal responses for episodes of AF remains controversial. However, their corresponding zones have been considered to be useful parameters as substrates of development of AF. Therefore, it is wise to clearly understand that a simple APC can produce changes in atrial electrical conduction that may alter the depolarization pathway in different manners eliciting reentry. Those changes may be profound in certain patients with altered atrial muscle vulnerability.

Acknowledgments

None.

Conflicts of interest

None.

References

  1. Ohe T, Matsuhisa M, Kamakura S, et al. Relation between the widening of the fragmented atrial activity zone and atrial fibrillation. Am J Cardiol. 1953;53(10):1219˗1222.
  2. Centurión OA. Clinical implications of the P wave duration and dispersion: Relationship between atrial conduction defects and abnormally prolonged atrial endocardial electrograms. Int J Cardiol. 2009;134(1):6˗8.
  3. Yin X, Zhao Y, Xi Y, et al. The early stage of the atrial electroanatomic remodeling as substrates for atrial fibrillation in hypertensive patients. J Am Heart Assoc. 2004.
  4. Centurion OA, Isomoto S, Fukatani M, et al. Relationship between atrial conduction defects and fractionated atrial endocardial electrograms in patients with sick sinus syndrome. Pacing Clin Electrophysiol. 1993;16(10):2022˗2033.
  5. Cosio F, Lovet A, Vidal J. Mechanism and clinical significance of atrial repetitive responses in man. Pacing Clin Electrophysiol. 1983;6(1 Pt 1):53˗59.
  6. Centurion OA, Shimizu A, Isomoto S, et al. Repetitive atrial firing and fragmented atrial activity elicited by extrastimuli in the sick sinus syndrome with and without abnormal atrial electrograms. Am J Med Sci. 1994;307(4):247˗254.
  7. Wyndham C, Amat-y-Leon F, Wu D, et al. Effects of cycle length on atrial vulnerability. Circulation. 1977;55(4):260˗267.
  8. Shimizu A, Konoe A, Tanigawa M, et al. Electrophysiologic characteristics of repetitive atrial firing: atrial extrastimulus at four sites. Jpn J Cardiac Pacing Electrophysiol. 1993;9:126˗131.
  9. Bakirci EM, Demirtas L, Degirmenci H, et al. Relationship of the total atrial conduction time to subclinical atherosclerosis, inflammation and echocardiographic parameters in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Clinics. 2015;70(2):73˗80.
  10. Cosio FG, Palacios J, Vidal JM, et al. Electrophysiologic studies in atrial fibrillation. Slow conduction of premature impulses: a possible manifestation of the background for reentry. Am J Cardiol. 1983;51(1):122˗130.
  11. Johnson NJ, Rosen MR. The distinction between triggered activity and other cardiac arrhythmias. In: Brugada P, Wellens H, eds. Cardiac arrhythmias: where do we go from here? Mt. Kisko, Futura Publisher, New York, USA. 1987;129˗145.
  12. Saksena S, Prakash A, Krol RB, et al. Regional endocardial mapping of spontaneous and induced atrial fibrillation in patients with heart disease and refractory atrial fibrillation. Am J Cardiology. 1999;84(8):880˗889.
  13. Hashiba K, Tanigawa M, Fukatani M, et al. Electrophysiologic properties of atrial muscle in paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. Am J Cardiol. 1989;64(20):20˗23.
  14. Centurion OA, Fukatani M, Konoe A, et al. Different distribution of abnormal endocardial electrograms within the right atrium in patients with sick sinus syndrome. Br Heart J. 1992; 65(6):596˗600.
  15. Levy T, Fotopoulos G, Walker S, et al. Randomized controlled study investigating the effect of biatrial pacing in prevention of atrial fibrillation after coronary artery bypass grafting. Circulation. 2000;102(12):1382˗1387.
  16. Fan K, Lee KL, Chiu CS, et al. Effects of biatrial pacing in prevention of postoperative atrial fibrillation after coronary artery bypass surgery. Circulation.2000;102(7):755˗760.
  17. Delfaut P, Saksena S, Prakash A, et al. Long-term outcome of patients with drug-refractory atrial flutter and fibrillation after single- and dual-site right atrial pacing for arrhythmia prevention. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1998;32(7):1900˗1908.
  18. Saksena S, Delfaut P, Prakash A, et al. Multisite electrode pacing for prevention of atrial fibrillation. J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol. 1998;9(8 Suppl):S155˗162.
  19. D'Allonnes GR, Pavin D, Leclercq C, et al. Long-term effects of bi-atrial synchronous pacing to prevent drug-refractory atrial tachyarrhythmia: a nine-year experience. J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol. 2000;11(10):1081˗1091.
  20. Haissaguerre M, Jaise P, Sha DC, et al. Spontaneous initiation of atrial fibrillation by ectopic beats originating in the pulmonary veins. N Engl J Med. 1998;339(10):659˗666.
  21. Jais P, Haissaguerre M, Shah DC, et al. A focal source of atrial fibrillation treated by discrete radiofrequency ablation. Circulation. 1997;95(3):572˗576.
  22. Chen SA, Hsieh MH, Tai CT, et al. Initiation of atrial fibrillation by ectopic beats originating from the pulmonary veins: electrophysiologic characteristics, pharmacologic responses, and effects of radiofrequency ablation. Circulation. 1999;100(18):1879˗1886.
  23. Lu TM, Tai CT, Hsieh MH, Tsai CF, Lin YK, et al. (2001) Electrophysiologic characteristics in initiation of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation from a focal area. J Am Coll Cardiol 37(6): 1658-1664.
  24. Chen SA, Tai CT, Chen JY, et al. Right atrial focal atrial fibrillation : electrophysiologic characteristics and radiofrequency catheter ablation. J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol. 1999;10(3):328˗335.
  25. Moe GK, Rheinboldt WC, Abildskov JA. A computer model of atrial fibrillation. Am Heart J. 1964;67:200˗220.
  26. Allessie MA, Lammers WJEP, Bonke FIM, et al. Experimental evaluation of Moe's multiple wavelet hypothesis of atrial fibrillation. In: Zipes DP & Jalife J (Eds.), Cardiac Arrhythmias. Grune & Stratton, New York, USA. 1985;265˗276.
  27. Konings KTS, Kirchhof CJHJ, Smeets JRLM, et al. High-density mapping of electrically induced atrial fibrillation in humans. Circulation. 1994;89(4):1665˗1680.
  28. Kumagai K, Uno K, Khrestian C, et al. Simltaneous multisite mapping studies during induced atrial fibrillation in the sterile pericaridits model: Insights into the mechanism of its maintenance. Circulation. 1997;95(2):511˗521.
  29. Shimizu A, Nozaki A, Rudy Y, et al. Multiplexing studies of effects of rapid atrial pacing on the area of slow conduction during atrial flutter in canine pericarditis model. Circulation. 1991;83:983˗994.
  30. Ueda N, Yamamoto M, Honjo H, et al. The role of gap junctions in stretch-induced atrial fibrillation. Cardiovasc Res. 2014;104(2):364˗370.
  31. Kumagai K, Uno K, Khrestian C, et al. Single site radiofrequency catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: studies guided by simultaneous multisite mapping in the canine sterile periacritidis model. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2000;36(3):917˗923.
  32. Centurión OA, Shimizu A, Isomoto S, et al. Mechanisms for the genesis of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome: Intrinsic atrial muscle vulnerability vs. electrophysiological properties of the accessory pathway. Europace. 2008;10:294˗302.
  33. Xu GJ, Gan TY, Tang BP, et al. Age-related changes in cellular electrophysiology and calcium handling for atrial fibrillation. J Cell Mol Med. 2013;17(9):1109˗1118.
  34. Centurión OA, Shimizu A, Isomoto S, et al. Influence of advancing age on fractionated right atrial endocardial electrograms. Am J Cardiol. 2005;96(2):239˗242.
  35. Centurión OA, Isomoto S, Shimizu A. Electrophysiological changes of the atrium in patients with lone paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. J Atrial Fib. 2010;3(1):3˗9.
  36. Xiong F, Yin Y, Dubé B, et al. Electrophysiological Changes Preceding the Onset of Atrial Fibrillation after Coronary Bypass Grafting Surgery. PLoS One. 2014;9(9):e107919.
Creative Commons Attribution License

©2015 Centurión. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.