This map comes from a young woman with recurrent focal atrial tachycardia. It shows a “red” zone of earliest activation at the superior/posterior RA - SVC junction. The corresponding EGM and P wave are displayed alongside.
Is this truly the site that will deliver a successful ablation?
(Click to zoom on image)
Answer:
Always verify the EGM morphology at the earliest site using fundamental EP principles.
In a focal arrhythmia, if the earliest site lacks favourable EGM features (pre‑P wave, unipolar QS), suspect a far‑field source from another chamber. In this case, the PAC arose from the LA and conducted across an LA–RA muscular connection.
Take a close look at the EGM. There is likely two components, one far field early LA, and one near field (higher frequency) RA component which is “late”. Hard to prove, but I think it’s likely.
In this case, the earliest RA site lay adjacent to the LA, but the EGM lacked features predictive of successful ablation. Delivering thermal energy here carried a potential risk of phrenic nerve injury.
My two cents:
The EGM’s are the only source of truth.
Thanks for tuning in :)
Cheers
Mitch & CPiP Team
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