Notes on Paroxysmal Atrial Tachycardia (PAT)/Focal Atrial Tachycardia (Focal AT.)
Focal atrial tachycardia is caused by enhanced automaticity or re-entrant circuits giving rise to a flutter like atrial and consequently ventricular tachycardia.
Dr. Mobeen discusses:
- Properties of the focal atrial tachycardia (Focal AT.)
- Different terms used in this class of disorders e.g. focal atrial tachycardia, paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, atypical atrial flutter, etc.
- Causes of Focal AT.
- Pathophysiology of Focal AT.
- Clinical presentation.
- EKG representation.
- Medical and surgical treatment.
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Automaticity
- Normal Enhanced Automaticity:
- Change in the heart rate driven by the pacemaker cells.
- Sinus Tachycardia
- Sinus Bradycardia
- Sick sinus syndrome (alternating sinus tachycardia and sinus bradycardia.)
- Abnormal Enhanced Automaticity:
- An increased pacemaker like activity of cardiac myocytes and Purkinje cells.
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Drivers
- Non-nodal cardiac tissue that incorrectly starts to generate new impulses without the need to be triggered by another impulse (become automatic.) These ectopic foci are called drivers instead of pacemakers.
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Reentry
- Entrapment of an impulse, that originated somewhere else, in a reentrant circuit.
- As the impulse cycles in this reentrant circuit, it sends new impulses to the neighboring cells.
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Triggered activity
- An impulse giving rise to further impulses due to the abnormal state of myocardial cells.
- Note: these cells in the abnormal state cannot produce a new impulse on their own, they need an impulse acting as a trigger.
- Drugs that prolong action potential duration (APD), e.g. class III antiarrhythmic, can cause triggered activity.
- This triggered activity is called afterdepolarization (AD). It is of two types.
- Early Atrial Depolarization (AED). Caused by slow activation and prolonged action potential.
- Delayed afterdepolarization (DAD). Caused by the Ca++ overload.
1 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4823581/
https://www.uptodate.com/contents/enhanced-cardiac-automaticity
Paroxysmal Atrial Tachycardia (PAT) Characteristics
A type of Supraventricular Tachycardia
- Regular rhythm.
- Rate from 100 to 200 beats per minute (bpm).
- Usually, lasts for seconds or minutes. It can terminate and restart spontaneously. (It can become paroxysmal sustained tachycardia.)
- Incessant atrial tachycardia (incessant AT) is a term used when a patient has atrial tachycardia during the 90% of the monitoring time.
- The arrhythmia occurs due to the following abnormal impulses:
- Enhanced automaticity of an ectopic atrial focus.
- A reentrant circuit within atria.
- Enhanced automaticity type may have a warm up and cool down period.
- Reentrant form starts and stops abruptly as an atrial premature beat/contraction (PAC.) This is also called atypical atrial flutter.
- Normal healthy individuals of all ages can experience PAT.
- Digitalis toxicity can also cause PAT.
Causes of PAT/Focal AT
- Atrial stretch in patients with heart diseases. (Hypertension and cardiomyopathies.)
- Acute:
- Myocardial infarction.
- Pulmonary decompensation.
- Infections.
- Excessive alcohol ingestion.
- Hypokalemia.
- Hypoxia.
- Stimulants.
- Cocaine.
- Theophylline.
- More commonly it occurs in healthy individuals and is benign.
- AT incidence is higher in patients that have undergone catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation.
- Digitalis toxicity causes AT as well due to increased central sympathetic outflow.
Site of Abnormal Focus
- The right atrium is involved in 63% of the cases and 37% involve the left atrium.
- Right atrium:
- 35% tricuspid annulus.
- 34% crista terminalis.
- 17% coronary sinus ostium.
- 9% perinodal tissue.
- 4% RA appendage/auricle.
- Left atrium:
- 67% pulmonary veins.
- 17% mitral annulus.
- 6% coronary sinus body.
- 6% left intraatrial septum.
- 4% LA appendage/auricle.
Clinical Presentation
- Palpitations during the episodes/runs.
- Rapid fluttering sensation in the chest or neck usually is associated with focal AT/PAT.
- Patients can, rarely, present with syncope. This usually occurs when the ventricular rate is 200 beats per minute or above.
- Symptoms of other cardiac comorbidities e.g. heart failure, angina may become exacerbated. (Dyspnea, chest pain, etc.)
PAT’s Diagnostic Criteria
- Heart rate greater 100 beats per minute.
- Driver/focus other than the SA node. (P wave morphology is different.)
- Sudden in onset and offset.
- An isoelectric interval between p waves.
EKG Presentation
- Heart rate greater 100 beats per minute.
- Driver/focus other than the SA node. (P wave morphology is different.)
- As the arrhythmia is focal (from a single point of origin) and sustained. EKG displays p waves that can have morphology from normal to abnormal. P wave morphology, however, will be consistent.
- The cycle length of tachycardia is variable.
- Warm up and cool down phases are short (a few beats.) Sinus tachycardia takes 30 seconds to minutes to warm up or cool down.
- Intermittent AV blocks may occur. These blocks, however, do not affect the PAT’s runs.
- The Same focal driver can erratically fire between runs, adding atrial ectopic p waves. These p waves will have the same morphology to the p waves during the PAT’s runs.
Mapping the origin of the focus
- An elaborate algorithm that predicted the arrhythmogenic focus in 93% of the patients has been devised.
- V1 is important:
- Generally, a positive p wave or biphasic p wave with positive first is an indicator of the focus in the right atrium ( the majority of the cases.)
- A negative p wave or biphasic p wave with the negative phase first is an indicator of the focus in the left atrium.
- Careful inspection of the p waves in the other leads can help locate the origin in possibly one of the following locations:
- Coronary sinus, crista terminalis, right atrial appendage.
- Interatrial septum.
- Pulmonary veins, left atrial appendage.
- Locating the focus is important for the surgical ablation.
EKG Image
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PAT and PSVT
- Usually one cannot tell the difference between the focal atrial tachycardia (paroxysmal atrial tachycardia) and paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia.
- Warm up and cool down rhythms are unique to PAT if present.
- Carotid massage does not affect PAT.
- PSVT can slow down or terminate with carotid massage.
Treatment of PAT
Consistent with 2015 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association/Heart Rhythm Society (ACC/AHA/HRS)
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Acute
- Rate, symptoms and hemodynamic status guides the acute treatment.
- Treat the precipitating causes:
- Administer potassium to hypokalemic patients.
- If digitalis toxicity is suspected then discontinue digitalis and administer anti-digitalis antibodies if the hemodynamic status or other arrhythmias are life-threatening.
- The vagal maneuver can be performed by the patient, or administer intravenous adenosine. (Both of these are usually less effective.)
- IV beta blockers or nondihydropyridine Ca++ channel blockers (verapamil, diltiazem) can be given to hemodynamically stable patients.
- IV Amiodarone can be better than the beta blockers, and verapamil and diltiazem.
- Amiodarone can control acute tachycardia, terminate arrhythmia, and cause less hypotension.
- Cardioversion may be tried but it is usually less effective for the following reasons:
- Underlying pathology causing the arrhythmia may continue to trigger arrhythmias.
- Enhanced automaticity of non-nodal tissue usually does not respond to cardioversion.
- Hemodynamically unstable patients who fail to respond to above therapies may respond to chemical cardioversion with Amiodarone.
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Chronic suppressive or prophylactic
- Patients with few or no symptoms and rare/brief spells of arrhythmia may not need chronic treatment.
- Patients that do not respond to medical therapy or have been on drugs for a long time may need catheter ablation.
- Patients that do not want catheter ablation may need amiodarone, or class Ic (flecainide, propafenone), or class III (sotalol) antiarrhythmic. Which drug to use should be consulted with a cardiologist experienced with arrhythmia management.
- If catheter ablation also fails then cardiac pacemaker with AV nodal ablation may be considered.
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Treatment of incessant AT
- Aggressive management to restore normal sinus rhythm should be made.
- Beta blockers
- Class Ic drugs (flecainide).
- Usually, patients with incessant AT and LV systolic dysfunction that are not responding to medical therapy will need to undergo catheter ablation.
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Jul 19 2024, 7:54 pm
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iy393121@*.com
Jul 19 2024, 7:54 pm
Thanks!