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Postoperative atrial tachycardias after mitral valve surgery: Mechanisms and outcomes of catheter ablation.

BACKGROUND: Atrial tachycardias (ATs) including atrial fibrillation are common arrhythmias occurring late after mitral valve (MV) surgery, and their management is challenging.

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine the electrophysiological mechanisms of ATs in patients with prior MV surgery and the long-term outcomes of catheter ablation.

METHODS: We studied 67 consecutive patients (mean age 59.4 ± 10.6 years; 41 men [61%]) with prior MV surgery who presented with ATs postoperatively between 2007 and 2015.

RESULTS: AT was clinically documented before the electrophysiology study in 55 patients, whereas in the remaining 12 patients AT was inducible at the study. A total of 99 ATs (35 spontaneous and 64 inducible) were characterized. Overall, the right atrium (RA) was the chamber of origin in 56%. The underlying mechanism was macroreentry in 91 cases and included typical RA flutter (n = 37), mitral annular flutter (n = 21), incisional right AT (n = 16), roof-dependent reentry (n = 12), and local left atrial reentry (n = 5). Eight focal ATs were also documented: 6 from the left atrium and 2 from the RA. Left-sided ATs were more common in patients with prior Maze procedure (53%), and mitral annular flutter was twice as prevalent in this group (42% vs 21%; P = .05). The ablation was acutely successful in 98.5%. Freedom from atrial arrhythmias was 62% at 12 months, with 42% requiring more than 1 procedure.

CONCLUSION: Macroreentry is the predominant AT mechanism in patients with prior MV surgery. Circuits are most often localized to the RA, with left-sided ATs more common in patients with prior Maze procedure. Repeat procedures are common and outcomes with 1 year complete AT control good.

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