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1/7. Familial association of congenital left heart abnormalities and sustained fetal arrhythmia.

    hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) is the most common cause of death from heart disease in the first week of life. There are reports about familial concordance by presumed morphogenetic mechanisms of abnormal embryonic blood flow with phenotypes of varying severity. The risk of having a child with a left heart lesion after a previously affected child may be as high as 5% to 12%. We present case reports from four families in which sustained fetal arrhythmia (three ectopic atrial tachycardias and one severe bradycardia due to excessive ectopic atrial beats) was demonstrated. Within these four families a close relative of the mother (a previous child, a brother, or a nephew) had severe left heart abnormality (three with HLHS and one with severe aortic valve stenosis). The association of sustained fetal arrhythmia of ectopic atrial origin and severe left heart abnormalities could be expected to occur by chance in a very low percentage of cases. We conclude that sustained fetal atrial ectopic arrhythmia is a congenital abnormality and should be considered as a risk factor for inherited congenital heart abnormalities.
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2/7. Exit block of focal repetitive activity in the superior vena cava masquerading as a high right atrial tachycardia.

    An unusual case of atrial tachycardia (AT) originating from the superior vena cava (SVC) is reported. A 34-year-old man without structural heart disease underwent catheter ablation for drug-resistant AT. During the tachycardia, low-amplitude spiky electrograms with a cycle length of 120 to 175 msec were recorded in the SVC and exhibited 2:1 exit block to the atria, masquerading as the atrial activation observed with high right AT. These spiky electrograms also were observed during sinus rhythm, but they appeared immediately after the local atrial electrograms. The spikes were traced to a point 3 cm above the junction of the right atrium. Radiofrequency ablation at the site of the earliest appearance of the spike in the SVC successfully eliminated the tachycardia. During the following 15 months, no clinically significant atrial arrhythmias, including atrial fibrillation, occurred. This report indicates that careful mapping, including inside the SVC, will be a requisite in patients with high right atrial tachyarrhythmias.
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ranking = 0.42857142857143
keywords = rhythm
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3/7. Fetal bradycardia in the first trimester: an unusual presentation of atrial extrasystoles.

    We report a fetus with fetal bradycardia at 13 weeks of gestation secondary to atrial extrasystoles. The fetus subsequently developed paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia and hydrops fetalis. The cardiac arrhythmia recovered spontaneously without any medical intervention. This case illustrates that atrial ectopic beats can present in the first trimester with fetal bradycardia. Rapidly evolving hydrops fetalis secondary to supraventricular tachycardia can develop, warranting close monitoring with weekly heart rate assessment. Fetal bradycardia secondary to atrial extrasystole should be differentiated from first trimester sinus bradycardia and those associated with major structural cardiac abnormality, which have a high fetal loss rate.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = rhythm
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4/7. Total pulmonary vein occlusion as a consequence of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation mimicking primary lung disease.

    INTRODUCTION: catheter ablation has recently been used for curative treatment of atrial fibrillation. methods AND RESULTS: Three of 239 patients who underwent ablation close to the pulmonary vein (PV) ostia at our institute developed severe hemoptysis, dyspnea, and pneumonia as early as 1 week and as late as 6 months after the ablation. Because the patients were arrhythmia-free, the treating physician initially attributed the symptoms to new-onset pulmonary disease (e.g., bronchopulmonary neoplasm). After absent PV flow was confirmed by transesophageal echocardiography, transseptal contrast injection depicted a totally occluded PV in all three patients. Successful recanalization, even in chronically occluded Pvs, was performed in all patients. During follow-up, Doppler flow measurements by transesophageal echocardiography demonstrated restenosis in all primarily dilated PV, which led to stent implantation. CONCLUSION: PV stenosis/occlusion after catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation occurs in a subset of patients. However, because in-stent restenosis occurred in two patients after 6 to 10 weeks, final interventional strategy for PV stenosis or occlusion remains unclear. To prevent future PV stenosis or occlusion, a decrease in target temperature and energy of radiofrequency current or the use of new energy sources (ultrasound, cryothermia, microwave) seems necessary.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = rhythm
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5/7. Pseudosinus tachycardias originating from left pulmonary veins.

    The case of a 55-year-old man with LV dysfunction in whom the baseline cardiac rhythm falsely mimicked a sinus rhythm (SR) but actually originated from the left superior and inferior pulmonary vein (PV) is reported. The P waves before ablation were flat in leads I and V1, negative in lead aVL, and positive in leads II, III, aVF. After the left superior PV was isolated from the left atrium, another ectopic rhythm newly appeared from the left inferior PV. Interestingly, the LV systolic function improved after the resumption of the SR, thus suggesting that tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy might be involved in the mechanism of LV systolic disturbance.
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ranking = 0.42857142857143
keywords = rhythm
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6/7. Wide complex tachycardia due to automaticity in an accessory pathway.

    patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome have preexcited tachycardia as the result of atrial arrhythmias or antidromic reentry. This article describes a patient with persistent wide complex tachycardia due to abnormal automaticity in the accessory pathway. Radiofrequency catheter ablation resulted in simultaneous elimination of accessory pathway conduction and automaticity. Accessory pathway automaticity may be an infrequent cause of preexcited tachycardia in patients with the WPW syndrome.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
keywords = rhythm
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7/7. chloroquine and cardiac arrhythmia: case report.

    A case of a sixty two year old white man with plasmodium vivax malaria, who has shown chloroquine associated acute cardiac arrhythmia is reported.
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ranking = 0.71428571428571
keywords = rhythm
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