Despite major success in the treatment of atrioventricular (AV) node reentrant tachycardia using either catheter ablation or surgery, the morphologic basis underlying AV node reentry is not yet clear. A canine model of AV node reentrant tachycardia was used to examine the histologic features of the reentry circuit. AV node reentrant tachycardia was created in 4 of 8 dogs by a right atrial division which divided the right atrial free wall and the atrial septum into upper and lower portions on a plane between the mid-right atrial free wall and the fossa ovalis. The AV junctional area of all dogs were serially sectioned on a plane that was perpendicular to the AV annulus and the septum. The slices were stained with Masson's trichrome technique. The connections between atrial fibers and the compact AV node and the common AV bundle were examined, and comparison of the histologic features between dogs with and without AV nodal re-entry was made. The histologic examinations showed that, in all dogs, the operation scar was remote from the AV junctional area leaving the Koch's triangle intact. The compact node received its atrial inputs mainly from the anterosuperior and posterior aspects of the Koch's triangle. However, both atrial inputs gave off superficial (subendocardial) fibers that by-passed the compact node to terminate at the base of tricuspid valve. These superficial fibers might function as the proximal link between the dual AV nodal inputs by means of lateral connections. There was no bypass connection between atrial fibers and the common AV bundle. The histologic features of the AV junctional area was not different between dogs with and without AV nodal reentry. In conclusion, AV nodal reentry involves the anterior and posterior atrio-nodal inputs which function as dual AV nodal pathways, and the superficial bypass fibers form the proximal linkage between the two inputs. These structures, together with the compact node, complete the reentry circuit.