Beth Titus: Atrial Tachycardia <*dv_0*>Speaking to an audience of ESI employees in December 1999, Beth Titus described a five-year ordeal with an atrial arrhythmia that persisted despite years of conventional treatment and medication. At the end of her speech, the audience was in tears. Beth was diagnosed with an atrial tachycardia in 1996, after experiencing daily 5 to 20 minute episodes that left her lightheaded and dizzy. She was placed on medication to control the arrhythmia. Because her episodes were often triggered by exercise, she also had to abstain from physical activity. In Sept of 1996, she underwent a conventional ablation procedure that halted the arrhythmia. However, after two years the arrhythmia returned, and she could no longer climb stairs without risking an episode. "I was living life on the sidelines. My friends could play soccer or go to gym class. I had to watch." In May of 1999, Beths episodes became more frequent. She was referred to Dr. Steven Compton at the University of Utah. Dr. Compton used the EnSite 3000® System to identify a focal tachycardia that originated from a site in Beths right atrium. The site was eliminated with a simple ablation procedure. Since the EnSite procedure, Beth has had no recurrences of the arrhythmia, and she has resumed the life of a regular high-school sophomore. Five years of arrhythmia treatment are now over, and the braces shes worn for eight years have just been removed. In what is normally a watershed of worry for parents, she has just received her drivers license. But if she handles the responsibilities of adult life with the maturity that shes dealt with her medical problems, her parents have nothing to fear.  | | EnSite 3000® map of Beth Titus focal tachycardia | |