Pulmonary vein electrophysiology during cryoballoon ablation as a predictor for procedural success.

J Interv Card Electrophysiol

Department of Cardiology an Intensive Care Medicine, Heart Center Munich-Bogenhausen, Klinikum Bogenhausen, Englschalkinger Strasse 77, 81925, Munich, Germany.

Published: December 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • The cryoballoon technique is a new way to treat a heart condition called atrial fibrillation and is different from an older method called radiofrequency ablation.
  • Researchers wanted to see if they could monitor heart signals in real-time while using the cryoballoon technique by adding a special mapping tool inside the balloon.
  • In their study with 141 patients, they found that they could successfully monitor the heart signals during treatment in about 41% of cases and learned that if they achieved isolation in 83 seconds, it meant better chances of long-term success.

Article Abstract

Background: Cryoballoon technique is an innovative alternative to radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF). However, with current cryoballoon application techniques, the operator has no access to electrical information for 300 s during the freezing cycle.

Objective: The objective of this study is to investigate the novel approach of real-time monitoring of pulmonary vein (PV) potentials throughout freezing using a circular mapping catheter introduced into the central lumen of the cryoballoon catheter.

Methods: Patients had paroxysmal or persistent AF. Standard balloon catheters (23 or 28 mm diameter, 10.5 F shaft) were used. A coaxial mapping catheter (shaft diameter 0.9 mm; 15 mm loop with six electrodes) was advanced through the lumen of the cryoballoon catheter, replacing the guide wire. The primary procedural end point was successful PV isolation and real-time PV potential recording. Secondary end points were procedural data, complications, and the time to successful PV isolation.

Results: In 141 consecutively enrolled patients, balloon positioning and ablation were successful in 439/568 veins (77%). Real-time recording of PV conduction during the freeze cycle was possible in 235/568 PVs (41%). Main reasons for failure to obtain real-time PV recordings were a distal position of the circular mapping catheter or insufficient catheter-vessel wall contact during ablation. A cutoff value of 83 s to PV isolation was predictive of stable procedural PV isolation without reconduction. One minor hemoptysis was observed possibly related to the mapping catheter.

Conclusions: This study, the largest to date, showed that real-time monitoring of PV conduction during cryoballoon freezing can be safely performed with a circular mapping catheter. A cutoff time of 83 s to PV isolation was predictive of sustained procedural PV isolation success without reconduction.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10840-011-9585-xDOI Listing

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