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Dive into the research topics where Klaus-Peter Kunze is active.

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Featured researches published by Klaus-Peter Kunze.


Circulation | 1990

Sites of conduction block in accessory atrioventricular pathways. Basis for concealed accessory pathways.

Karl-Heinz Kuck; Karen J. Friday; Klaus-Peter Kunze; Michael Schlüter; Ralph Lazzara; Warren M. Jackman

Catheter recordings of accessory pathway (AP) activation were used to identify the site of antegrade and retrograde AP conduction block in 126 consecutive patients undergoing electrophysiological testing. Activation was recorded from 89 of 121 left free-wall and posteroseptal pathways (left APs) and from 12 of 24 right free-wall, midseptal, and anteroseptal pathways (right APs). The recorded APs were further subdivided into those exhibiting consistent antegrade conduction during sinus rhythm (overt APs: 50 left APs, eight right APs), those exhibiting intermittent antegrade conduction (intermittent APs: six left APs, two right APs), and those exhibiting only retrograde conduction (concealed APs: 33 left APs, two right APs). The sites of block were recorded during decremental atrial and ventricular stimulation. The sites of both antegrade and retrograde block were determined in 40 of 50 overt left APs and six of eight overt right APs. Antegrade and retrograde block occurred at or near the AP-ventricular (AP-V) interface in 37 of 40 overt left APs and two of six overt right APs and at the atrial-AP (A-AP) interface in one of 40 overt left APs and four of six overt right APs. In three of three overt left APs with no retrograde conduction, retrograde block occurred at or near the AP-V interface. The site of antegrade and retrograde block differed in only two of 58 overt pathways. There was no difference between overt APs limited at the A-AP or the AP-V interface in the shortest atrial or ventricular pacing cycle length maintaining 1:1 antegrade or retrograde AP conduction, respectively. Both antegrade and retrograde block occurred near the AP-V interface in four of six intermittent left APs and zero of two intermittent right APs and near the A-AP interface in two of six intermittent left APs and one of two intermittent right APs. The sites of both antegrade and retrograde block were determined in 28 of 33 concealed left APs, and both occurred at or near the AP-V interface in 26 and A-AP interface in two APs. In two of two concealed right APs, antegrade block occurred at the AP-V interface. These findings suggest that both antegrade and retrograde conduction are limited by factors operating near the AP-V interface in overt left APs and at the A-AP or AP-V interface in overt right APs. Factors limiting antegrade conduction in concealed APs appear to be located almost always near the AP-V interface.


Circulation | 1987

Sotalol in patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome.

Klaus-Peter Kunze; Michael Schlüter; Karl-Heinz Kuck

We evaluated the effects of intravenous and long-term oral sotalol treatment in 17 patients with an accessory atrioventricular (AV) pathway. All patients had a history of symptomatic supraventricular tachycardia. During electrophysiologic study intravenous (1.5 mg/kg body weight) and oral (240 to 320 mg/day) sotalol caused significant increases of sinus cycle length, AV nodal conduction time, and refractory periods of atrial and ventricular myocardium and accessory pathway. AV reciprocating tachycardia, which was inducible and sustained in 15 patients at control, was still inducible after intravenous sotalol in 14 patients, including one in whom it was not inducible at control. However, tachycardia became nonsustained in 10 patients. In seven patients who underwent repeat drug testing while on oral sotalol, results were the same as after intravenous sotalol. Sixteen patients were followed-up for 36 months (median value). Fifteen of them were clinically free of symptoms or experienced marked improvement, despite recurrences of tachycardia in two. In a third patient sotalol had to be withdrawn because of recurrent supraventricular tachycardia. Orthostatic hypotension occurred in five patients and required withdrawal of sotalol in one. To predict the long-term clinical outcome of patients, exercise testing and Holter monitoring were of little or no value. Programmed electrical stimulation predicted clinical outcome in 63% after intravenous and in 86% after oral sotalol. This study shows that long-term treatment with sotalol is highly effective in patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome and regular supraventricular tachycardia.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1989

Ablation of a left-sided free-wall accessory pathway by percutaneous catheter application of radiofrequency current in a patient with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome.

Karl-Heinz Kuck; Klaus-Peter Kunze; Michael Schlüter; Manfred Geicer; Warren M. Jackman

KUCK, K‐H., et al.: Ablation of a Left‐Sided Free‐Wall Accessory Pathway by Percutaneous Catheter Application of Radiofrequency Current in a Patient with the Wolff‐Parkinson‐White Syndrome A case is presented of a 20‐year‐old woman with a history of three episodes of syncope within the last 4 years, which was caused by a rapid ventricular response to atrial fibrillation via a left‐sided posterior accessory pathway. A variety of antiarrhythmic agents had failed to control the arrhythmia. Using a novel dual catheter approach, with one catheter in the coronary sinus and an adjacent catheter in the left ventricle close to the mitral annulus, accessory pathway conduction was successfully interrupted by two radiofrequency current applications between the tip electrodes of the two catheters. During follow‐up, 12‐lead electrocardiogroms have been normal and the patient has been asymptomatic.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1989

Pleomorphic Ventricular Tachycardia: Demonstration of Conduction Reversal Within the Reentry Circuit

Karl-Heinz Kuck; Michael Schlüter; Klaus-Peter Kunze; Manfred Geiger

A case is presented of a patient with incessant venfricular tacbycardia of left bundle branch block morphology. Endocardial mapping revealed the site of earliest activation during tachycardia to be the proximal right ventricular septum. Pacing at this site elicited the clinical tachycardia, whereas pacing at the proximal left ventricular septum induced a right bundle branch block morphology identical to that of a previously recorded spontaneous ventricuiar tachycardia. Electrophysiological evidence is given that both types of tachycardia originate from a single reentry circuit located in the proximal ventricular septum in which the reentrant wavefront may travel either orthodromically (during spontaneous tachycardia and right ventricular pacing) or antidromically (during left ventricular pacing).


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1995

Preexcitation in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: A Case of a Fasciculoventricular Mahaim Fiber

Christoph Stellbrink; Klaus-Peter Kunze; Peter Hanrath

STELLBRINK, C., et al.: Preexcitation in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: A Case of a Fasciculoventricular Mahaim Fiber. A patient with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) who presented with preexcitation pattern on the surface ECG suggestive of the Wolff‐Parkinson‐White (WPW) syndrome is described. Intracardiac electrophysiological study revealed a fixed anomalous QRS complex and a short fixed His‐ventricular interval indicating a fasciculoventricular Mahaim fiber. As this specific form of accessory connection does not cause reentrant tachycardias, no treatment was required. It is important to distinguish this entity from atriofascicular or nodoventricular Mahaim fibers or the WPW syndrome in patients with HCM showing a preexcitation pattern in the surface ECG, as these may cause life‐threatening arrhythmias in this patient population.


Anesthesiology | 1991

Intravenous dantrolene does not exhibit calcium channel blocking effects on the cardiac conduction system in humans

Michael Kentsch; Norbert Roewer; Klaus-Peter Kunze; Karl-Heinz Kuck

In malignant hyperthermia, dantrolene, a drug assumed to possess calcium channel blocking properties, effectively suppresses supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias. To investigate antiarrhythmic properties of dantrolene, six patients (three women and three men, age 42 +/- 18 yr) with symptomatic atrioventricular (AV)-nodal reentry tachycardia were studied. Electrocardiographic measurements included sinus cycle length, PQ-interval, width of the QRS-complex, and QT- and rate-corrected QT-interval. During the electrophysiologic study, effective refractory periods of the right atrium, AV node, right ventricle, and AV-nodal conduction intervals were determined, and AV-nodal reentry tachycardia was induced in all patients. Dantrolene was administered intravenously over a period of 15 min at doses of 1.0, 1.5, or 3.0 mg/kg in two patients each. The dosage was not further increased because of side effects at the dose of 3.0 mg/kg. After the infusion of dantrolene, the electrocardiographic measurements and electrophysiologic study were repeated. The plasma concentrations of dantrolene ranged from 1.69 to 6.61 micrograms/ml at the time of the electrophysiologic study. After dantrolene administration, the sinus cycle length shortened from 686 +/- 80 to 622 +/- 55 ms (P less than 0.05). No significant changes of any other parameter could be demonstrated after intravenous dantrolene. AV-nodal reentry tachycardia remained inducible in all patients without change of the tachycardia cycle length and without change in coupling intervals of tachycardia-inducing extrastimuli. Antiarrhythmic properties of dantrolene could not be demonstrated in patients with AV-nodal reentry tachycardia at therapeutic doses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Herz | 1998

Ambulante Katheterablation@@@Outpatient radiofrequency catheter ablation: Indications, results, risks: Indikationen, Ergebnisse, Risiken

Klaus-Peter Kunze; Bernd Hayen; Manfred Geiger

ZusammenfassungBei 162 Patienten wurden 176 Katheterablationen ambulant durchgeführt. Die Indikation bestand aus anfallsweisem Herzrasen bei 167 Prozeduren, 74mal mit Präsynkope oder Synkope. Siebenmal bestanden hochsymptomatische Palpitationen, einmal rezidivierende Synkopen und einmal ein bisher asymptomatisches Wolff-Parkinson-White-Syndrom. Durch die Ablation wurde 78mal eine AV-Knoten-Reentry-Tachykardie, 56mal eine akzessorische Leitungsbahn, 15mal Vorhofflattern, 16mal Vorhofflimmern, achtmal eine atriale Tachykardie und dreimal eine idiopathische ventrikuläre Tachykardie behandelt. Die Erfolgsrate betrug 86%. Nach 148 Ablationen wurden die Patienten innerhalb von 24 Stunden entlassen, davon 28mal nach drei Stunden, jeweils mit unkompliziertem Verlauf. In 28 Fällen erfolgte eine stationäre Einweisung, 15mal aufgrund von Wundschmerzen, zwölfmal wegen geringfügiger, ablationsbedingter Komplikationen, einmal wegen Perikardtamponade, die operativ versorgt werden mußte. Bei einem Patienten trat drei Tage nach Ablation einer atrialen Tachykardie und Entlassung am selben Tag ein rechtsatrialer Thrombus mit konsekutiver Lungenembolie auf. Insgesamt betrug die Inzidenz schwerwiegender Komplikationen 2,27%.Die Katheterablation kann auch ambulant effektiv und sicher durchgeführt werden.SummaryThe purpose of this study was to test the efficacy, feasibility, and safety of outpatient radiofrequency catheter ablation in 162 consecutive patients. There were 83 men and 79 women at a mean age of 47+15 years; 13 patients underwent 2 and 1 patient 3 ablation procedures. In 167 cases patients suffered from highly symptomatic paroxysmal tachycardia associated with presyncope or syncope in 74. Severe palpitations were present in 7 cases and recurrent syncope in 1 case. One patient had an asymptomatic Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome with a shortest RR-interval during atrial fibrillation of 150 ms. The mechanism of tachycardia was found to be atrioventricular nodal reentry in 78 cases, atrioventricular reentry involving an accessory atrioventricular pathway in 56, atrial fibrillation in 16, atrial flutter of the common type in 15, ectopic atrial tachycardia in 8, and idiopathic ventricular tachycardia in 3. Catheter ablation was performed in these 176 cases at an overall success rate of 86%. In 148 cases patients could be treated on an outpatient basis and were discharged after a maximal observation time of 3 hours in 28, and 24 hours in another 120 cases. Short-term follow-up was uneventful in these patients. After 28 ablation procedures patients had to be admitted to the hospital, because of pain at the puncture sites or after pacemaker implantation in 15 cases, because of minor complications in 12, and because of pericardial tamponade in 1 case. Another severe complication occurred in 1 patient after successful ablation of right atrial tachycardia. Three days after discharge the patient suffered from pulmonary embolism originating from a thrombus at the ablation site. After hospital admission the patient recovered completely. In general, complication rate was 2.27%.This study shows that catheter ablation can be performed effectively and safely on an outpatient basis.The purpose of this study was to test the efficacy, feasibility, and safety of outpatient radiofrequency catheter ablation in 162 consecutive patients. There were 83 men and 79 women at a mean age of 47 + 15 years; 13 patients underwent 2 and 1 patient 3 ablation procedures. In 167 cases patients suffered from highly symptomatic paroxysmal tachycardia associated with presyncope or syncope in 74. Severe palpitations were present in 7 cases and recurrent syncope in 1 case. One patient had an asymptomatic Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome with a shortest RR-interval during atrial fibrillation of 150 ms. The mechanism of tachycardia was found to be atrioventricular nodal reentry in 78 cases, atrioventricular reentry involving an accessory atrioventricular pathway in 56, atrial fibrillation in 16, atrial flutter of the common type in 15, ectopic atrial tachycardia in 8, and idiopathic ventricular tachycardia in 3. Catheter ablation was performed in these 176 cases at an overall success rate of 86%. In 148 cases patients could be treated on an outpatient basis and were discharged after a maximal observation time of 3 hours in 28, and 24 hours in another 120 cases. Short-term follow-up was uneventful in these patients. After 28 ablation procedures patients had to be admitted to the hospital, because of pain at the puncture sites or after pacemaker implantation in 15 cases, because of minor complications in 12, and because of pericardial tamponade in 1 case. Another severe complication occurred in 1 patient after successful ablation of right atrial tachycardia. Three days after discharge the patient suffered from pulmonary embolism originating from a thrombus at the ablation site. After hospital admission the patient recovered completely. In general, complication rate was 2.27%. This study shows that catheter ablation can be performed effectively and safety on an outpatient basis.


Herz | 1998

[Ambulatory catheter ablation. Indications, results and risks].

Klaus-Peter Kunze; Bernd Hayen; Manfred Geiger


Anesthesiology | 1988

DANTROLENELACK OF ANTIARRHYTHMIC PROPERTIES IN MAN

Norbert Roewer; M. Kentsch; Klaus-Peter Kunze; Karl-Heinz Kuck


Herz | 1998

AMBULANTE KATHETERABLATION : INDIKATIONEN, ERGEBNISSE, RISIKEN

Klaus-Peter Kunze; Bernd Hayen; Manfred Geiger

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Michael Schlüter

Hamburg University of Technology

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Warren M. Jackman

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Karen J. Friday

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Ralph Lazzara

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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