Lyme Carditis: Where Is the Site of the Atrioventricular Block?
1Department of Cardiology, University of Health Sciences, Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Türkiye
2Department of Cardiology, Samsun University Training and Research Hospital, Samsun, Türkiye
3Department of Cardiology, İstanbul Medipol University, İstanbul, Türkiye
Anatol J Cardiol 2024; 5(28): 5019-5021 PubMed ID: 38430117 PMCID: 11059225 DOI: 10.14744/AnatolJCardiol.2024.4266
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CONTENT

A 23-year-old man presented to an outside hospital with the chief complaint of fatigue and dizzy spells. He was diagnosed with Lyme disease based on the history of a tick bite, the presence of erythema migrans (2 months after the tick bite), and Borrelia IgG and IgM antibodies demonstrated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and western blot findings. The patient specifically denied any history of syncope; however, the conduction system pacing was recommended due to recurrent dizzy spells. After the first electrocardiography (ECG) was taken at admission (Figure 1A and 1B), we decided to perform atropine testing (Figure 1C and 1D). Where do you locate the site of the block in the ECG?

Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne disease in the United States and Europe the duration of infection and the species of Lyme borrelia causing the infection can affect the clinical features of Lyme disease. The 2 : 1 AV block may be atrioventricular (AV) nodal, intrahisian, infrahisian, or at multiple levels.

We had a 2 : 1 second-degree AV block in which the conducted beats show a narrow QRS complex. Indeed, a 2 : 1 AV block may be atrioventricular (AV) nodal, intrahisian, infrahisian, or at multiple levels,1-5 and it might be difficult to differentiate these only from the surface ECG.1 It cannot be easy also to rule out the blocked atrial bigeminy. Note that during the 2 : 1 AV block there was a ventriculophasic sinus arrhythmia. The PP intervals containing a QRS in between were shorter than those not including a ventricular depolarization (Figure 1B). However, every blocked P wave was a sinus P wave (morphology), since both were identical to sinusal ones (Figure 1B), and we rule out the blocked atrial bigeminy.

When the QRS is normal, the level of the block is either AV node or intrahisian. When the QRS is wide, all 3 options are on the table. Therefore, the narrow QRS complexes easily exclude the bundle branches as the site of the AV block. In addition, measuring the PR interval of the conducted P wave in the 2 : 1 block can be of help.6 In the presence of the narrow QRS and 2 : 1 block, the normal PR interval suggest the intrahisian block, whereas the presence of the prolonged PR of the conducted beat proposes that the block is generally in the AV node. Furthermore, even when there was sinus tachycardia (Figure 1C) at the time he was having PR prolongation. Therefore, we performed the atropine testing (Figure 1D), which result in a 2 : 1 AV block. Atropine and exercise will improve AV nodal conduction.7 Therefore, if the conduction improves with atropine or exercise, or worsens with CSM, the block is in the AV node.6,8 If the conduction worsens with atropine or exercise or improves with CSM, the block is in His or bundle branches.8 It looks like a discrepancy at the first stage, whereas the PR prolongation suggests the AV nodal block; the atropine testing proposed the intrahisian block. Then the patient further underwent an electrophysiology study for evaluation of conduction system disease. The split His signals were seen on electrograms (Figure 2A) as a sign of the typical intra-His block because the QRS was normal and this was a rare finding to see on one catheter a split His. A split His bundle signal spanning more than 30 milliseconds or a block occurring between these split signals, as in this case, seals the diagnosis of intrahisian block.1 Typically in the infra-nodal block, the PR interval is not prolonged; however, that is frequently the case in 2 : 1 AV nodal block.6 Two levels of the block, which can be either in the AV node, the AV node, and HPS or 2 levels in the HPS, might be responsible in that situation. The presence of an AV block with irregular RR intervals with a pattern not fitting into a simple type 1 block should suggest the presence of a multilevel block. Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne disease in the United States and Europe.9 The duration of infection and the species of Lyme borrelia causing the infection can affect the clinical features of Lyme disease.9 The patient underwent temporary–permanent left bundle branch area and right atrial pacing with concomitant long-term ceftriaxone therapy (Figure 2B). One year later after long-term ceftriaxone therapy without symptomatology and pacemaker dependency, early pacemaker explantation performed.

Footnotes

Informed Consent: Written informed consent was obtained from the patient.

Declaration of Interests: The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.

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