EP Europace | 2019

Anatomical hotspots of fractionated electrograms in the left and right atrium: do they exist?

 
 
 

Abstract


Aims\nTargeting of complex fractionated electrograms (CFEs) in the atria is not yet beneficial in treating drug-refractory atrial fibrillation (AF). In order to gain insight into potential anatomical hotspots of fractionated electrograms, a structured literature search was performed.\n\n\nMethods and results\nPubMed was searched for studies describing fractionation during human atrial electrophysiological measurements (n\u2009=\u2009565), of which 36 articles described the pre-ablation distribution of fractionated electrograms for the left atrium and/or right atrium in at least four regions. Fractionation was commonly found in high proportions within all regions of both atria, without clear preference for specific regions. Furthermore, no differences in the fractionation distribution between paroxysmal AF and persistent AF patients were observed.\n\n\nConclusion\nWhereas atrial inhomogeneous conduction is widely believed to play a key role in AF initiation and perpetuation, different electrophysiological causes for fractionation and the influence of measurement properties complicate identification of the arrhythmogenic substrate. Thereby, simply targeting all CFEs would be short-sighted. Further research is warranted on how to distinguish physiologic CFEs from pathologic CFEs , with only the latter reflecting potential targets for ablative therapy of AF.

Volume 21
Pages 60–72
DOI 10.1093/europace/euy059
Language English
Journal EP Europace

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