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Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome
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				Contents
Background
- Abbreviation: WPW
 
Orthodromic Type
- More common type occuring ~95% of the time
 - Accessory pathway (Kent bundles) is used for retrograde reentry conduction
 - QRS narrow (delta wave absent)
 - May see ST depression, TWI
 - Rate 150-250 bpm
 
Antidromic Type
- Least common type occuring ~5% of the time
 - Accessory pathway used for anterograde conduction
 - QRS wide, delta wave present
 
Atrial Fibrillation and Flutter[1]
- Atrial fibrillation in up to 20% of patients with WPW
- Irregular rhythym, wide QRS complexes
 - Changing QRS complexes in shape and morphology
 - Axis remains stable as opposed to polymorphic VT
 
 - Atrial flutter in ~7% of patients with WPW
- Similar features to atrial fibrillation with WPW
 - Except regular rhythym
 - Easily mistaken for regular rate VT
 
 - Treatment with AV nodal blocking agents (adenosine, beta-blockers, calcium-channel blockers, amiodarone, digoxin) may incite ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia
 - "Manifest WPW" = degeneration into VT or VF
 
Clinical Features
- Suspect in any patient with ventricular rate >300
 
Differential Diagnosis
Palpitations
- Arrhythmias:
- Atrial fibrillation
 - Grouped beats on ECG (commonly misdx as A-fib)
- Atrial bigeminy and trigeminy
 - Mobitz I or Mobitz II
 
 - Atrial flutter
 - SVT
 - Ventricular Tachycardia
 - Sick sinus syndrome
 - Multifocal atrial tachycardia
 - PVCs
 - Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome (WPW)
 - Sinus node dysfunction
 - AV Block
 - Lown-Ganong-Levine Syndrome
 - Accelerated idioventricular rhythm
 
 - Non-arrhythmic cardiac causes:
- Cardiomyopathy
 - CHF
 - Mitral valve prolapse
 - Congenital heart disease
 - Pericarditis
 - Valvular disease
 - Pacemaker malfunction
 - Acute MI
 
 - Psychiatric causes:
 - Drugs and Medications:
- Alcohol
 - Caffeine
 - Meds (i.e. digitalis, theophylline)
 - Street drugs (i.e. cocaine)
 - Tobacco
 
 - Misc
 
Evaluation
Workup
Evaluation
Although the ECG and an electrophysiology study are diagnostic, the characteristic features are not always seen on ECG
- Short PR interval - <0.12sec
- Due to loss of normal AV node conduction delay
 - Differentiate from premature junctional complex
 
 - Delta wave / slurred upstroke
- Due to early activation of ventricular myocardium
 
 - QRS duration > 0.10 sec
- Represents a fusion beat
 
 - Dominant R wave in V1, Type A WPW
- Left sided accessory pathway
 
 - Dominant S wave in V1, Type B WPW
- Right sided accessory pathway
 
 - Tall R waves in V1-V3 with T wave inversion
- Mimic RVH
 
 - "Negative" delta waves in III and aVF
- Appear as pseudo-infarct Q waves
 - Mimics prior inferior infarct
 
 
Management
Orthodromic
Treat like paroxysmal SVT
- Unstable
- Cardioversion (synchronized)
 - Adult: 50-100 J
 - Peds: 0.5-2 J/kg
 
 - Stable
- Calcium channel blockers, beta-blockers, procainamide, or adenosine
 - Procainamide safe irrespective of type of pathway conduction
 
 
Antidromic
Treat like ventricular tachycardia
- Synchronized cardioversion
- Adult: 50-100 J
 - Peds: 0.5-2 J/kg
 - Procainamide: 20-50mg/min IV over 30min (up to 17mg/kg, hypotension, or 50% widening of QRS complex); mainenance 1-4 mg/min
- Avoid if prolong QT or CHF
 
 - Amiodarone with 'ABCD' drugs ie adenosine, beta-blockers, calcium-channel blockers, digoxin
 
 - Wide-complex, irregular (presumed preexcited A-fib)
- Unsynchronized cardioversion (200J)
 
 
Atrial Fibrillation and Atrial Flutter
- Stable
- Procainamide 20-50 mg/min until arrhythmia suppressed
 - Synchronized cardioversion, 100 - 200 J
 
 - Unstable - synchronized cardioversion
- Consider higher joule dosage and frequency of repeats than for stable
 
 - Avoid AV nodal blocking agents
 
Disposition
Discharge
- Consider if dysrhythmia was easily terminated and can arrange outpatient EP study with possible RF catheter ablation
 - Consider consulting cardiologist regarding outpatient beta-blockers vs. more potent medications (amiodarone, sotalol, flecainide, etc.)
 
Admit or transfer to center with electrophys[2]
- Patients with chest pain, CHF, electrolyte imbalance, or required cardioversion
 - Syncope
 - Uncertain diagnosis (wide-complex tachycardia)
 - Significant associated structural heart disease (MVP, cardiomyopathy)
 - Family history of Sudden cardiac death
 - Atrial flutter or atrial fibrillation
 
See Also
External Links
References
- ↑ Burns E. Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndromes. Life in the Fast Lane. http://lifeinthefastlane.com/ecg-library/pre-excitation-syndromes/.
 - ↑ Ellis CR et al. Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome Treatment & Management. eMedicine. Dec 4, 2015. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/159222-treatment#showall.
 
