Clinical Arrhythmology and Electrophysiology: A Companion to Braunwald's Heart Disease

Intraventricular conduction abnormalities

Normally, the entire mass of ventricular myocardium is depolarized in about 80 to 100 milliseconds. This requires highly synchronous electrical activation of the ventricular myocardium, which can be achieved only through the rapidly conducting His-Purkinje system (HPS). The term intraventricular…

Atrioventricular conduction abnormalities

Anatomy and physiology of the atrioventricular junction Internodal and interatrial conduction Evidence suggests the presence of preferential impulse propagation from the sinus node to the atrioventricular node (AVN)—that is, higher conduction velocity between the nodes in some parts of the…

Sinus node dysfunction

Anatomy and physiology of the sinus node Anatomy The sinus node is a crescent-shaped, subepicardial specialized muscular structure located posterolaterally in the right atrial (RA) free wall. The sinus node lies within the epicardial groove of the sulcus terminalis, at…

Ablation energy sources

Radiofrequency ablation Biophysics of radiofrequency energy Radiofrequency (RF) refers to the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum in which electromagnetic waves can be generated by alternating current (AC) fed to an antenna. Electrosurgery (coagulation, cauterization, and ablation) currently uses hectomeric wavelengths…

Advanced mapping and navigation modalities

Conventional RF ablation has revolutionized the treatment of many supraventricular as well as ventricular arrhythmias. Success in stable arrhythmias with predictable anatomical locations or characteristics identifying endocardial electrograms, such as idiopathic ventricular tachycardia (VT), atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT), atrioventricular…

Conventional intracardiac mapping techniques

Cardiac mapping refers to the process of identifying the temporal and spatial distributions of myocardial electrical potentials during a particular heart rhythm. Cardiac mapping is a broad term that covers several modes of mapping such as body surface, endocardial, and…

Electrophysiological testing: Tools and techniques

Indications Invasive electrophysiological (EP) testing involves recording a portion of cardiac electrical activity and programmed cardiac electrical stimulation via multipolar catheter electrodes positioned percutaneously strategically at various locations within the cardiac chambers. EP testing is used predominantly in patients with…

Electrophysiological mechanisms of cardiac arrhythmias

The mechanisms responsible for cardiac arrhythmias are generally divided into categories of disorders of impulse formation (automaticity or triggered activity), disorders of impulse conduction (reentry), or combinations of both. Automaticity is the property of cardiac cells to initiate an impulse…

Cardiac ion channels

Ion channels are pore-forming membrane proteins that regulate the flow of ions passively down their electrochemical gradient across the membrane. Ion channels are present on all membranes of cells (plasma membrane) and intracellular organelles (nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum). There are…

Molecular mechanisms of cardiac electrical activity

Ionic equilibrium The lipid bilayer of the cell membrane is hydrophobic and impermeable to water-soluble substances such as ions. Hence, for the hydrophilic ions to be able to cross the membrane, they need hydrophilic paths that span the membrane (i.e.,…