Title: Supraventricular Tachycardia in Infancy and Childhood
1Supraventricular Tachycardiain Infancy and
Childhood
- Terrence Chun, MD
- Pediatric Electrophysiology and Pacing
2Cardiac electrical anatomy
3SVT - Overview
- Rapid rhythm that involves or is driven by
structures in the upper heart - Incidence up to 1250 children
- Generally well-tolerated, even fast rates
- Risk of life-threatening arrhythmias is uncommon
4Narrow vs. Wide QRS
- Not all narrow QRS complex tachycardia is
supraventricular tachycardia - Not all wide QRS complex tachycardia is
ventricular tachycardia
5SVT Mechanisms - Overview
- Reentrant rhythms
- Automatic rhythms
6SVT mechanisms Automatic Rhythms
- Originate from a particular focus
- Warm-up and cool-down behavior
- Respond to drugs and maneuvers that affect
myocardial automaticity - May be suppressed by faster rates
- Usually do not respond to cardioversion
(typically pause, then restart)
7SVT mechanisms Automatic Rhythms
- Left atrial focus
- 21 AVN conduction
8SVT mechanisms Reentrant rhythms
- Requires a circuit of tissue to create
repetitive activation - Must have appropriate conditions to perpetuate
reentrant rhythm - Usually abrupt onset and termination
- Regular, with little variation in rate
- Often will respond to cardioversion
9SVT mechanisms Reentrant rhythms
10Diagnostic methods
- 12-lead electrocardiogram ! ! !
- Post-op atrial/ventricular pacing wires
- Esophageal pacing leads
- Adenosine can be diagnostic
- Invasive electrophysiology study
11Diagnostic methods
- Always
- Always
- Always record a rhythm strip during any
intervention (adenosine, cardioversion, Valsalva,
etc.)
12Diagnostic methods
13ECG clues to diagnosis
- Wide vs. narrow complex
- Regular vs. irregular
- Abrupt vs. gradual
- P wave relationship to QRS
14Parade of Rhythms
15Automatic rhythms Sinus Tachycardia
- Sinus node fish-shaped structure with head at
SVC-RA junction and tail extending along RA
wall - S-tach usually due to increased sympathetic
discharge, fever, anemia, hypovolemia,
hyperthyroidism, etc. - Inappropriate sinus tachycardia - rare
16Automatic rhythms Sinus Tachycardia
- Dx
- Rate greater than normal range, but usually less
than 200 - P wave axis normal (0 90)
- PR interval normal
- Tx
- Treat the cause
17Automatic rhythms Automatic Atrial Tachycardia
- Originates from a focus in either the right or
left atrium, or atrial septum - Commonly from atrial appendages, crista
terminalis, pulmonary veins - Can also be due to central lines, etc.
- Also called ectopic atrial tachycardia
- although any automatic rhythm other than sinus
rhythm is technically ectopic
18Automatic rhythms Automatic Atrial Tachycardia
- Dx
- Speeds-up and slows-down, rates vary
- P wave axis abnormal
- PR interval may be abnormal (it is a function of
distance from focus to AVN) - May see 2 AV block (e.g. Wenckebach or 21 at
higher atrial rates) - Adenosine ? P waves march through despite AV
block
19Automatic rhythms Automatic Atrial Tachycardia
20Automatic rhythms Automatic Atrial Tachycardia
- Tx
- Remove source (check CXR and pull back PICC)
- Beta-blockers
- Esmolol infusion in ICU setting
- propranolol, atenolol
- Amiodarone, others
- Catheter ablation
21Automatic rhythms Junctional Tachycardia
- Originates from around the AV junction
- Also called JET (Junctional Ectopic
Tachycardia), because it sounds cool - Rate 170-200
- Most commonly seen post-operatively, usually
self-limited - Congenital forms, more persistent
22Automatic rhythms Junctional Tachycardia
- Dx
- AV dissynchrony
- Sinus P wave at different rate than narrow QRS
- Atrial wire ECG (in post-op with pacing wires)
- Cannon a-waves on CVP monitor
- Retrograde P waves (abnormal Pw axis)
- May be on top, before, or after QRS
23Automatic rhythms Junctional Tachycardia
24Automatic rhythms Junctional Tachycardia
- Tx
- Reduce catecholamines
- Decrease inotropic drips
- Pain control and sedation
- Cooling/hypothermia
- Drugs (amiodarone)
- ECMO
- Catheter ablation(?)
25Parade of Rhythms
26Reentrant rhythms Pathway Mediated Tachycardia
- Bypass tract of conductive tissue connects atrium
to ventricle - Most common mechanism of SVT in children
- Rate 180-240
- May be manifest (e.g. WPW) or concealed (no
preexcitation) - Pathway can be anywhere on mitral or tricuspid
annuli, usually left-sided
27Reentrant rhythms Pathway Mediated Tachycardia
- Orthodromic reciprocating tachycardia
- Runs correctly with normal conduction
- Down AV node (narrow QRS)
- Up accessory pathway (retrograde)
- Retrograde P waves may be visible after QRS
- Antidromic reciprocating tachycardia
- Runs against normal conduction
- Down accessory pathway (wide QRS)
- Up AV node (retrograde)
- Less common
28Reentrant rhythms Pathway Mediated Tachycardia
- Dx
- Electrocardiogram
- Rhythm strips of start and stop of SVT
29Reentrant rhythms Pathway Mediated Tachycardia
- Tx
- Valsalva maneuvers, Ice to face
- Adenosine (technique matters!)
- Antiarrhythmic drugs
- Beta blockers (watch blood glucose in infants!)
- Digoxin (limited value digitalization only in
difficult situations) - Others (Verapamil, Flecainide, Sotolol, etc.)
- Catheter ablation
30Reentrant rhythms Wolff-Parkinson-White
Syndrome
- Electrocardiogram findings
- Short PR interval
- Wide QRS complex
- Delta wave
31Reentrant rhythms Wolff-Parkinson-White
Syndrome
32Reentrant rhythms Wolff-Parkinson-White
Syndrome
- Clinical symptoms
- Palpitations
- SVT
- Note narrow QRS and lack of delta wave!
33Reentrant rhythms Wolff-Parkinson-White
Syndrome
- Sudden death(!)
- Atrial fibrillation
- Rapid conduction over bypass tract
- Ventricular fibrillation
- Risk 0.1-0.6 per year
34Reentrant rhythms Wolff-Parkinson-White
Syndrome
- Tx
- Tachycardia control
- Recognition
- Drugs (patient/family choice)
- Digoxin generally contraindicated
- Risk stratification
- Holter
- Exercise testing
- Invasive electrophysiology testing
- Catheter ablation
35Reentrant rhythms AV Node Reentry Tachycardia
- More common in teens and adults
- Tachycardia circuit contained within
atrioventricular node - Activates atria at the top of the circuit,
ventricles at bottom of circuit, nearly
simultaneously - Rate 200-250
- Usually cannot see retrograde P waves
36Reentrant rhythms AV Node Reentry Tachycardia
37Reentrant rhythms AV Node Reentry Tachycardia
- Tx
- Adenosine
- Cardioversion
- Pharmacotherapy
- Beta blockers
- Digoxin
- Others
- Catheter ablation
38Reentrant rhythms Atrial Flutter
- Flutter circuit around anatomic structures in
atrium - Eustachian valve
- Crista terminalis
- Fossa ovalis
- Surgical incisions
39Reentrant rhythms Atrial Flutter
- Atrial rate 300 (higher in neonates)
- Ventricular rate depends on AV node conduction
- 11 ? 300/min
- 21 ? 150/min
- 31 ? 100/min
- May be 31 then 21 then
40Reentrant rhythms Atrial Flutter
- Sawtooth flutter waves (may or may not be
helpful)
41Reentrant rhythms Atrial Flutter
- Dx
- Electrocardiogram
- Adenosine blocks AV node flutter waves continue
- Tx
- Rate control digoxin, beta blockers, etc.
- Overdrive pacing
- DC cardioversion
- Catheter ablation
42Threatening Rhythms
- Atrial fibrillation in high-risk WPW
- Danger of ventricular fibrillation
- Persistent prolonged SVT
- Tachycardia induced cardiomyopathy (reversible)
- SVT in compromised cardiac status
- Syncope or cardiovascular collapse
43Treatment Pearls
44Adenosine
- 0.1-0.4 mg/kg/dose
- Very short half-life (seconds)
- Central administration can be helpful, but not
necessary - Rapid saline bolus (5-10 ml) essential
- Stopcock on venous access is helpful
45DC Cardioversion
- Dose
- Cardioversion 0.25-1 J/kg
- Defibrillation 1-2 J/kg
- Synchronized (avoids making worse)
- Paddles frontapex
- Patches
- Frontapex
- Frontback
46Catheter Ablation
- Multiple catheters
- Size limitations
- Ideally gt 15 kg, but can be done in infants if
necessary - Can be curative
- 95 success rate in children
47Record a Rhythm Strip!
- Especially during interventions
- Most SVT in infants and children is
hemodynamically well-tolerated - Proper diagnosis can guide appropriate therapy
- RA/LA/RL/LL limb leads give 6 electrograms (I,
II, III, aVL, aVR, aVF)