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Assessment of temperature, proximity and course of the esophagus during radiofrequency ablation within the left atrium

Authors :
Jens Gunther
Robert A. Schweikert
Volker Schibgilla
Fethi Kilicaslan
Walid Saliba
John Drago
Atul Verma
J. David Burkhardt
MarkAlain Dery
Andrea Natale
Jennifer E. Cummings
Johannes Brachmann
Source :
Heart Rhythm. 2:S10
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2005.

Abstract

Background— Left atrioesophageal fistula is a devastating complication of atrial fibrillation ablation. There is no standard approach for avoiding this complication, which is caused by thermal injury during ablation. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the course of the esophagus and the temperature within the esophagus during pulmonary vein antrum isolation (PVAI) and correlate these data with esophagus tissue damage. Methods and Results— Eight-one patients presenting for PVAI underwent esophagus evaluation that included temperature probe placement. Esophagus course was obtained with computed tomography, 3D imaging (NAVX), or intracardiac echocardiography. For each lesion, the power, catheter and esophagus temperature, location, and presence of microbubbles were recorded. Lesion location and esophagus course were defined with 6 predetermined left atrial anatomic segments. Endoscopy evaluated tissue changes during and after PVAI. Of 81 patients, the esophagus coursed near the right pulmonary veins in 23 (28.4%), left pulmonary veins in 31 (38.3%), and mid-posterior wall in 27 (33%). Esophagus temperature was significantly higher during left atrial lesions along its course than with lesions elsewhere (38.9±1.4°C, 36.8±0.5°C, P P Conclusions— Lesions near the course of the esophagus that generated microbubbles significantly increased esophagus temperature compared with lesions that did not. Power did not correlate with esophagus temperatures. Esophagus variability makes the avoidance of lesions along its course difficult. Rather than avoiding posterior lesions, emphasis could be placed on better esophagus monitoring for creation of safer lesions.

Details

ISSN :
15475271
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart Rhythm
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4bf41852bedabd0839ee5f683b37324c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrthm.2005.02.042