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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Radiofrequency catheter ablation for atypical atrial flutter in dogs

By Santilli, Roberto A et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology·2014·Clinica Veterinaria Malpensa, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Radiofrequency catheter ablation of atypical atrial flutter in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Five dogs were brought in for fatigue caused by a fast heart rate. An ECG showed they had a specific type of heart rhythm problem called supraventricular tachycardia. After tests, veterinarians found that the issue was due to a reentrant circuit in the heart. They treated all the dogs with a procedure called radiofrequency catheter ablation, which successfully blocked the abnormal heart rhythm in most cases. At a follow-up 18 months later, three dogs had no signs of the problem returning, while two dogs experienced some recurrence of their heart issues shortly after the treatment.

People also search for: dog fast heart rate treatment · dog fatigue heart problems · atrial flutter in dogs

Abstract

Five dogs were presented to our institution for fatigue caused by an incessant supraventricular tachycardia. In all dogs, an ECG on admission showed a narrow QRS complex tachycardia with a median ventricular cycle length of 220 ms (range 180-360 ms), and a positive atrial depolarization identifiable in the ST segment following the previous QRS complex. There was a 1:1 atrioventricular conduction ratio in all but one dog, which presented with 2:1 atrioventricular block. Electrophysiologic studies identified the underlying arrhythmogenic mechanism as a right atrial macro-reentrant tachycardia with two distinct isthmic areas: right septal (RS) in three dogs and right atrial free wall (RAFW) in two dogs. Linear radiofrequency catheter ablation was performed during tachycardia in all dogs at the identified isthmic area, which acutely blocked the macroreentrant circuit. At 18-month follow-up, 3 dogs (1 with RAFW isthmus and 2 with RS isthmus) showed no recurrence of the arrhythmia on Holter monitoring. One dog with RS isthmus showed recurrence of the supraventricular tachycardia 15 days post-ablation, and 1 dog with RAFW isthmus presented with persistent atrial fibrillation 2 months post-ablation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24461642/