A young woman in her third trimester of pregnancy had complained of panic attacks on multiple occasions.
She presented to the ED this time, instead of to a clinic, for the same complaint and her pulse was palpated at "very fast".
Side note: Many panic attacks are diagnosed as SVT by 3 year followup. In other words, the patient was wrongly diagnosed and treated for psychiatric disease for up to 3 years.
Lessmeier TJ, Gamperling D, Johnson-Liddon V, et al. Unrecognized paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia. Potential for misdiagnosis as panic disorder. Arch Intern Med. 1997;157(5):537-543. More Info
EMA July 1997: Unrecognized Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia: Potential For Misdiagnosis As Panic Disorder. EM:RAP. https://www.emrap.org/episode/ema-1997-7/abstract5. Updated September 20, 2017. Accessed September 24, 2020.
Here is the 12-lead ECG:
She was brought to the critical care area and put on monitors. Her heart rate on the cardiac monitor constantly changed from narrow complex at 170 to narrow at 230 and back again.
She was hooked up to a continuous 12-lead ECG machine so that the different rates could be recorded.
Here is the slower rate:
Here I point out the retrograde P-waves with arrows.
So this is clearly a re-entrant paroxysmal SVT (SVT, or PSVT). But it is at 2 different rates. Why?
Time zero Trop < 4 ng/L
2 hour = 12 ng/L
No 4 hour troponin was measured, but I suspect it would have been above the 16 ng/L cutoff for acute myocardial injury (for women; 34 ng/L for men), and then she would have been diagnosed with a type II MI.
Type II MI: acute myocardial injury (rise and/or fall of troponin with at least one value above the 99th %-ile upper reference limit AND the injury is due to ischemia AND there is some identifiable source of supply demand mismatch, such as hypotension, anemia, severe hypertension, sustained tachydysrhythmia, etc.)
So this elevated heart rate did cause enough ischemia to result in troponin release.
Here is the post conversion EKG:
"An AP that does not manifest on ECG is revealed when the rate exceeds the refractory period of the AV node. This has been described as a latent AP. A latent AP can conduct both antegrade and retrograde transmissions."
Why were there two different rates?
Usually this is due to simultaneous:
1. "dual AV nodal pathways", which is the source of most SVT (AV nodal reentry tachycardia, or AVNRT)
2. WITH ADDITIONAL Accessory pathway.
See images far below for dual AV nodal pathways
Most likely Explanation: There are 2 pathways in the AV node, just as there are in all cases of AVNRT. But in this case, there is a third pathway, probably an accessory pathway. The reentrant rhythm goes down through the AV node taking one or the other of the 2 pathways, switching back and forth, and up the accessory pathway. This is an orthodromic SVT, but because the 2 pathways have different conduction velocities, there are 2 different rates.
Provisional Diagnosis: probable Dual AV nodal pathways PLUS bypass tract, with orthodromic SVT that changes rates depending on the AV nodal pathway taken (see images below). Needs verification by EP study.
This case was kindly reviewed by Dr. Rehan Karim, one of our fine electrophysiologists. He made the following comment (in addition to informing me that the term WPW is reserved only for those with delta waves):
"There are some other nuances, which might be out of scope of the blog:"
- "Patients can have “more than one” slow pathways – that could result in multiple cycle lengths of AVNRT’s."
- "I have had two patients with alternating cycle lengths during same tachycardia (every other beat alternating cycle length, rather than two different tachycardias) – one was accessory pathway mediated (AVRT) retrograde, and antegrade using fast and slow pathways as you have described; another one where patient had AVNRT with two different cycle lengths."
"Therefore, it’s difficult to be certain about it just looking at 12-lead ECG’s – but if I were to guess, the explanation that you give in your description is most likely correct!"
See these two cases:
Case 1: Wide Complex Tachycardia in a 20 something.
This patient developed ventricular fibrillation from Cardioversion.
Case 2: A Very Fast Regular Narrow Complex, Followed by an Equally Fast Regular Wide Complex
2. Left lateral accessary pathway
Holy Cow, Steve.
ReplyDeleteI'm still trying to learn STEMI, OMI and neither, and then you give us this! still confusing after all these years , but less so now, a bit. Very cool post. hope our patient and pregnancy fares well.
Dr Smith I congratulate you for the great post of NCT with two different rates and the mechanism succinctly explained by suitable schematic diagrams. ( Mar 25th 2021 ). However, your electrophysiologist's opinion that a if a syndrome is due to an accessory pathway, then Delta wave
ReplyDeleteshould be seen in the baseline ecg. Ofcourse, I noted your point that WPW may manifest intermittently.
One of our case of NCT with all features of orthodromic AVRT ( RP= 80ms and negativve P waves in inferior and lateral leads and positive P waves in aVR with gross ST depression in mutiple leads and ST elevation in aVR) showed normal sinus rhythm immediately after IV diltiazem conversion. And lo, the expected short PR with Delta wave appeared in the ECG repeated after 2 hours only.
with regards, Dr.R.Balasubramanian, PONDICHERRY- INDIA.