Abstract: | In this study of surgical procedures for various tachyarrfiythmias, Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome comprised most of the cases. An endocardial approach was used to ablate accessory pathways. Additional use of cryocoagulation after surgical incision of the atrium, previously routinely performed, is at present only done occasionally for septal accessory pathways. Ventricular tachycardia (VT) was the next most frequent condition. The surgical procedures for ischemic and nonischemic VTs are completely different, although both are based on the principle of complete electrophysiologic mapping. For ischemic VT, surgery consists of resection of the left ventricular aneurysm and excision or cryocoagulation of the endocardium, or both. For nonischemic VT, either excision of the entire thickness of the myocardium (2.0 × 2.5 cm on average) at the earliest excitation site of the right ventricle and cryocoagulation of the area of delayed potential or only incision and cyrocoagulation of the left ventricle were performed to avoid reduction of the left ventricular cavity. Ectopic atrial tachycardia was cured by excision of the earliest excitation site without use of a heart-lung machine, when the focus was located in the atrial free wall. Other successful treatments were of reentrant atrial tachycaroia by cryocoagulation, atrial flutter by cryocoagulation of impulse pathways at the coronary sinus and around the atrioventricular node, and a new surgery for atrial fibrillation and flutter, which retained sinus rhythm. Johnson's procedure was used for surgical ablation of atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia. |