Mapping and Ablation of Paraseptal Focal Atrial Tachycardias

Ivaylo R. Tonchev, Arie L Schwartz, Ashley M Nisbet , David Chieng, Troy M Watts, Paul Sparks, Joseph B Morton, Geoffrey Lee, Peter M. Kistler, Jonathan M. Kalman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Focal atrial tachycardia (AT) may arise from a range of closely related anatomical sites in the paraseptal region.

Objectives: This study sought to define the anatomical distribution and examine the electrocardiographic and electrophysiological features of paraseptal focal AT, suggest a mapping approach, and report ablation outcomes.

Methods: This retrospective single-center study defined paraseptal ATs as originating from the following anatomical sites: right perinodal region, septal tricuspid annulus, right septum, coronary sinus (CS) ostium, left septum, septal mitral annulus, aorto-mitral continuity, and non-coronary cusp (NCC) adjacent. Early septal activation was defined when the earliest right atrial activation occurred at the His bundle region or CS ostium ≥10 milliseconds before P-wave onset.

Results: Among 227 patients (mean age 54.8 ± 15.8 years; 61.7% female), foci were diverse and included: right perinodal, n = 61 (26.9%); septal tricuspid annulus, n = 23 (10.1%); right septum, n = 28 (12.3%); CS ostium, n = 43 (18.9%); left septum, n = 28 (12.3%); septal mitral annulus, n = 16 (7.1%); aorto-mitral continuity, n = 19 (8.4%); and NCC adjacent, n = 9 (4%). Ablation was attempted in 213 (93.8%) of 227 patients and was successful in 189 (88.7%) of 213 patients; there were no instances of persistent atrioventricular block. The NCC was not a common ablation site. P-wave morphology was characteristic (V1 was predominantly negative/positive, isoelectric/positive, or isoelectric, 91%) but did not distinguish between these anatomical sites. Sequential and systematic mapping was required to localize earliest activation.

Conclusions: Paraseptal focal ATs arise from diverse but closely related anatomical locations. There is no single site from which ablation is consistently successful. Although some are indeed perinodal and accessible from the NCC, others arise from adjacent structures. Nevertheless, detailed, sequential mapping facilitates safe and effective ablation in most cases.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2202-2213
Number of pages12
JournalJACC: Clinical Electrophysiology
Volume11
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2025

Keywords

  • ablation
  • atrial tachycardia
  • non-coronary cusp
  • paraseptal
  • perinodal

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