AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the placement of lesions affects the success of radio-frequency catheter renal denervation (RDN) on swine kidneys, focusing on whether lesions should be made post-bifurcation using different catheter systems.
  • Sixteen swine were divided into four groups to test various combinations of lesions made in branch and main renal arteries with two different catheter systems (Spyral and EnligHTN).
  • Results showed that all treatment methods significantly reduced kidney norepinephrine levels, but there were no meaningful differences in effectiveness between the groups, suggesting that the EN catheter technology can be as effective as the SP system for both branch and main artery treatments.*

Article Abstract

Objectives: Anatomic placement of lesions may impact efficacy of radio-frequency (RF) catheter renal denervation (RDN). However, it is unclear if it is necessary to perform treatments post bifurcation with systems that may provide deeper penetration to achieve successful RDN.

Methods: Sixteen domestic swine (n=16) were randomly assigned to 4 groups: 1) 8 lesions created in the branch arteries using the Spyral catheter (SP8); 2) 8 lesions created in the branch arteries plus 4 lesions created in the main artery using the SP catheter (SP12); 3) 8 lesions created in the main artery using the EnligHTN catheter with the distal position as close as possible to the bifurcation (EN8); and 4) 12 lesions created in the main artery using the EN catheter with the distal position as close as possible to the bifurcation (EN12).

Results: Each arm showed statistically significant changes in kidney norepinephrine (NE, ng/g) between treated kidneys vs. untreated contralateral control. There were no statistically significant differences in tissue NE% reductions across each arm based on catheter, anatomic location, & number of lesions (p=0.563): EN8 -74±34%, EN12 -95±3%, SP8 -76±16%, SP12 -82±17% (p=0.496). A total of 46 lesions were measured for lesion depth: EN main (3.3±2.8mm) vs. SP branch (2.0±1.0mm, p=0.039), SP main (2.9±1.6mm) vs. SP branch (p=0.052), and EN main vs. SP main (p=0.337).

Conclusions: Distally-focused main renal artery treatment using the EN system appears to be equally efficacious in reducing tissue NE levels compared with SP treatment in the branches plus main renal arteries, advocating for device-specific procedure execution.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.04.057DOI Listing

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