# Case report: orthodromic atrioventricular re-entrant tachycardia with left lateral accessory pathway—smart diagnosis with a smart device

**Authors:** Caroline M Wiederkehr, Andreas S Müller, Martin Igual, Alain M Bernheim

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ehjcr/ytaf177 · 2025-04-08

## TL;DR

A wearable smart device helped diagnose a rare heart rhythm disorder by capturing two distinct ECG patterns that led to successful treatment.

## Contribution

Demonstrates the diagnostic value of wearable smart devices in capturing rare arrhythmia patterns for accurate SVT diagnosis.

## Key findings

- A wearable smart device captured two distinct tachycardia episodes with different ECG morphologies.
- The captured data showed Coumel’s sign, leading to the diagnosis of left lateral accessory pathway.
- Electrophysiological study confirmed the diagnosis and successful ablation of the accessory pathway.

## Abstract

Patients with supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) are often symptomatic, but frequency of symptoms is very variable. Definition of tachycardia mechanism and diagnosis is dependent on documentation of the arrhythmia by electrocardiogram (ECG), but this documentation is often missed by standard evaluation with a Holter ECG. Wearable smart devices with ECG function are valuable diagnostic tools in such patients.

We describe a case of a 59-year-old male patient who suffered from infrequent palpitations, where documentation of two distinct tachycardia ECG tracings with a wearable smart device led to the correct diagnosis. One tracing showed an episode of narrow QRS complex tachycardia at a heart rate of 200 b.p.m. and the other a broad complex tachycardia with left bundle branch block morphology at a slower heart rate. Based on these findings, which demonstrate Coumel’s sign, atrioventricular re-entrant tachycardia with left lateral accessory pathway was suspected. Electrophysiological study confirmed the diagnosis, and an accessory pathway located at the lateral mitral isthmus was successfully ablated.

Aberrant ventricular conduction due to functional bundle branch block is an important finding during SVT. In the presented case, a wearable smart device was able to document two episodes of tachycardia with two distinct ECG morphologies, one with broad QRS complexes at a slower heart rate and the other with a faster episode of narrow QRS complexes. Therefore, the wearable device was not only able to document an episode of symptomatic tachycardia, but it also additionally offered important keys to the correct diagnosis.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** palpitations (MESH:D006331), tachycardia (MESH:D013610), SVT (MESH:D013617), atrioventricular re-entrant tachycardia (MESH:D013611), arrhythmia (MESH:D001145), functional bundle branch block (MESH:D002037)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12032389/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12032389