RT Journal Article T1 A simple surgical technique to prevent atrial reentrant tachycardia in surgery for congenital heart disease†. A1 Hosseinpour, Amir-Reza A1 Adsuar-Gómez, Alejandro A1 González-Calle, Antonio A1 Pedrote, Alonso A1 Arana-Rueda, Eduardo A1 García-Riesco, Lorena A1 Arce-León, Álvaro A1 Jiménez-Velasco, Adriano A1 Borrego-Domínguez, José Miguel A1 Ordóñez-Fernández, Antonio K1 Arrhythmias K1 Atrial flutter K1 Congenital heart disease K1 Prophylactic surgery K1 Reentrant atrial tachycardia K1 Surgical technique AB To present and test a simple surgical technique that may prevent atrial reentrant tachycardia following surgery for congenital heart disease. This arrhythmia is one of the commonest long-term complications of such a surgery. It may occur many years (even decades) after the operation. It is usually explained as a late consequence of right atriotomy, which is an inherent component of many operations for congenital heart disease. Right atriotomy results in a long scar on the right atrial myocardium. This scar, as any scar, is a barrier to electrical conduction, and macro-reentrant circuits may form around it, causing reentrant tachycardia. However, this mechanism may be counterchecked and neutralized by our proposed method, which prevents reentrant circuits around right atriotomy scars. The proposed method is implemented after termination of cardiopulmonary bypass and tying the venous purse-strings. It consists of constructing a full-thickness suture line on the intact right atrial wall from the inferior vena cava (IVC) (a natural conduction barrier) to the atriotomy incision. This suture line is made to cross the venous cannulation sites if these are on the atrial myocardium (rather than being directly on the venae cavae). Thus, the IVC, atriotomy and cannulation sites are connected to each other in series by a full-thickness suture line on the atrial wall. If this suture line becomes a conduction barrier, it would prevent reentrant circuits around right atrial scars. This was tested in 13 adults by electroanatomical mapping. All 13 patients had previously undergone right atriotomy for atrial septal defect closure: 8 of them with the addition of the proposed preventive suture line (treatment group) and 5 without (control group). In all 13 cases, the atriotomy scar was identified as a barrier to electrical conduction with electrophysiological evidence of fibrosis (scarring). In the 8 patients with the proposed suture line, this had also become a scar and a complete conduction barrier. In the 5 patients without this suture line, there was free electrical conduction between the IVC and atriotomy scar. The proposed suture line becomes a scar and conduction barrier. Therefore, it would prevent reentrant circuits around atrial scars and their consequent arrhythmias. YR 2015 FD 2015-10-07 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/10360 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/10360 LA en DS RISalud RD Apr 8, 2025