Background: Fluoroscopy-guided catheter placement is limited in its ability to determine electrode-endocardial contact and involves radiation exposure. We hypothesized that (1) intracardiac echocardiography (ICE) would provide superior assessment of linear electrode contact compared to fluoroscopy and (2) slow temperature decay upon discontinuation of the radiofrequency current (time for temperature to fall 90% after a 10-second test application of the radiofrequency current T90) would indicate optimal electrode-myocardial contact.
Methods: Sixty endocardial lesions were created in the atria and ventricles of six goats by simultaneous delivery of the radiofrequency current through two linear electrodes of a microcatheter with a central interelectrode thermocouple.