
pmid: 9083886
Atrial Flutter. For five decades, the mechanism of atrial flutter remained controversial, with protagonists and antagonists of circus movement versus ectopic focus theories. The development of clinical electrophysiologv in the 1970s and the observations made by many authors in various canine heart models supported the concept of atrial flutter as a reentrant wave confined to the right atrium. It was established that, in the common type of atrial flutter, the activation wavefront proceeds in a cranial direction over the right atrial septum and descends on the right atrial free wall in the caudal direction. A zone of slow conduction was identified interiorly and posteriorly in the right atrium, target of the modern ablative techniques. The history of atrial flutter clearly illustrates the bidirectional flow of information and the mutual stimulation between the basic and the clinical levels, leading both to a better understanding of the nature of the arrhythmia and to new therapeutic approaches.
Electrophysiology, Dogs, Atrial Flutter, Animals, Humans, History, 20th Century
Electrophysiology, Dogs, Atrial Flutter, Animals, Humans, History, 20th Century
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