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Catheter ablation for supraventricular tachycardia in children 20kg using an electroanatomical system

Authors :
Volkan Tuzcu
Celal Akdeniz
Serhat Koca
Koca, Serhat
Akdeniz, Celal
Tuzcu, Volkan Istanbul Medipol Univ, Pediat & Genet Arrhythmia Ctr, Pediat Cardiol, Istanbul, Turkey
Koca, Serhat Yuksek Ihtisas Hosp, Pediat Cardiol, Ankara, Turkey
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer, 2019.

Abstract

WOS: 000471631500014 PubMed ID: 30603855 PurposeCatheter ablation is the only choice of treatment in some small children with medically refractory supraventricular tachycardia (SVT). Electroanatomical mapping systems (EMS) are more commonly utilized in electrophysiological procedures in recent years, which resulted in a significant decrease in fluoroscopy exposure. The potential benefit of EMS in small children has not been studied. Therefore, we investigated the outcomes of children undergoing catheter ablation weighing 20kg using an electroanatomical mapping system.MethodsThis study evaluated the outcomes, characteristics, and follow-ups of children 20kg who underwent SVT ablations between April 2012 and April 2018 in a pediatric electrophysiology center where EMS were routinely used.ResultsIn a 6-year period, 1129 children underwent SVT catheter ablation under EMS guidance at our institution. A total of 84 of them were weighing 20kg. The acute success rate was 97.6% in 85 tachycardia substrates. No fluoroscopy was used in 58 of the patients, while a median of 5 (4-14)min of fluoroscopy was used in the remaining 26 patients. Recurrences were seen in 4 patients (4.8%) at a mean follow-up of 3.892.08years. Five patients developed non-vital complications (2 right bundle block and 3 temporary complete block that spontaneously resolved during the procedure). Conclusions The outcome of catheter ablation with the guidance of EMS for the treatment of SVT in small children is favorable. Fluoroscopy exposure can be decreased and even eliminated in most patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00047163
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9124b548d62d14ad32d16f1f61412f61