Supraventricular tachyarrhythmia caused by a macro-reentrant circuit within the atria.
Aetiology
- Associated with hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, cardiomyopathy and thyroxytosis
- Reentrant circuit located in the right atrium
- Involves the cavotricuspid isthmus (CTI) between the tricuspid valve and inferior vena cava
- Most common form of AFL
- Reentrant circuits outside the CTI
- May arise in:
- Left atrium
- Right atrium outside the CTI
- Often associated with:
- Prior cardiac surgery
- Previous atrial ablation
- Structural heart disease
Typical (CTI-dependent) atrial flutter
Atypical (non-CTI-dependent) atrial flutter
Pathophysiology
- Caused by stable macro-reentry around anatomical or functional barriers
- Typical AFL
- Circuit rotates around the tricuspid annulus
- CTI acts as a zone of slow conduction critical for sustaining reentry
- Direction may be:
- Counterclockwise (most common)
- Clockwise
- Atypical AFL
- Circuits depend on atrial scars or remodeled tissue
- Mechanisms are more heterogeneous and complex
- Atrial remodeling, fibrosis, and conduction anisotropy facilitate AFL maintenance
Clinical presentation
Mostly asymptomatic
Symptoms may include:
- Palpitations
- Dyspnea
- Fatigue
- Reduced exercise tolerance
- Presyncope or syncope
Investigations
ECG
- Regular atrial activity without an isoelectric baseline
- Classic “sawtooth” flutter waves, especially in:
- Inferior leads (II, III, aVF)
- Ventricular response often shows:
- 2:1 atrioventricular conduction (ventricular rate ≈150 bpm)
- Atypical AFL presents variable ECG morphologies

Management
- Management of a symptomatic acute paroxysm is by cardioversion (DCCV or pharmacological)
- Patients who have been in atrial flutter for more than 1–2 days should be anticoagulated for 3 weeks prior to cardioversion
- Treatment of choice for recurrent atrial flutter is catheter ablation; other options include AV nodal blocking agents e.g. β-blockers and class III anti-arrhythmics e.g. amiodarone
Complications
- Chronic atrial flutter usually progresses to atrial fibrillation
Ready to test your knowledge?