Abnormally fast heart rhythm arising from improper electrical activity in the upper part of the heart
Aetiology
- Caused by the electrical signal re-entering the atria from the ventricles
Pathophysiology
There are three main types of SVT based on the source of the electrical signal:
AV nodal re-entrant tachycardia
- Re-entry circuit forms within the AV node
- Most common cause of SVT in patients with a structurally normal heart
- More common in women
AV re-entrant tachycardia (AVRT)
- Involves an accessory pathway usually located in the valvular rings
- Most commonly caused by Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
Ectopic atrial tachycardia (EAT)
- Occurs when the electrical signal originates in the atria somewhere other than the sinoatrial node
- A latent pacemaker discharges action potentials at a greater frequency than the SA node so overdrive suppression is lost
Clinical presentation
- Palpitations
- Dyspnoea
Investigations
ECG
- Fast narrow complex tachycardia (QRS < 0.12)
- Regular rhythm
- Heart rate usually 150–250 bpm
- P-waves may be absent, hidden in QRS, or retrograde

Management
Management of EAT
- If ectopic beats are spontaneous and the patient has a normal heart, treatment is rarely required and reassurance to the patient will often suffice
- If symptoms are particularly troublesome, β-blockers are sometimes effective
- Patient advised to avoid stimulants (caffeine, cigarettes)
Stable patients with SVT
Stepwise approach:
- Valsalva manoeuvre
- Carotid sinus massage (avoid in elderly/bruit/hx of stroke/hx of VF/AF
- Adenosine IV 6 mg LD → If fail, increase to 12 mg LD
- Adenosine works by slowing cardiac conduction primarily though the AV node
- It interrupts the AV node / accessory pathway during SVT and 'resets' it back to sinus rhythm
- Adenosine IV 6-12 mg + Verapamil IV 2.5-5 mg or Diltiazem 15-20 mg
Unstable patients with SVT
Unstable (hypotension, shock, chest pain, altered consciousness):
- Immediate synchronized cardioversion 100-150 J
Long term management of patients with paroxysmal SVT
- Medication - beta blockers, calcium channel blockers or amiodarone
- Radiofrequency ablation - preferred in younger patients