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Acute Cardiac MRI Assessment of Radiofrequency Ablation Lesions for Pediatric Ventricular Arrhythmia: Feasibility and Clinical Correlation

Authors :
Elena K, Grant
Charles I, Berul
Russell R, Cross
Jeffrey P, Moak
Karin S, Hamann
Kohei, Sumihara
Ileen, Cronin
Kendall J, O'Brien
Kanishka, Ratnayaka
Michael S, Hansen
Peter, Kellman
Laura J, Olivieri
Source :
Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology. 28(5)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Arrhythmia ablation with current techniques is not universally successful. Inadequate ablation lesion formation may be responsible for some arrhythmia recurrences. Periprocedural visualization of ablation lesions may identify inadequate lesions and gaps to guide further ablation and reduce risk of arrhythmia recurrence.This feasibility study assessed acute postprocedure ablation lesions by MRI, and correlated these findings with clinical outcomes. Ten pediatric patients who underwent ventricular tachycardia ablation were transferred immediately postablation to a 1.5T MRI scanner and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging was performed to characterize ablation lesions. Immediate and mid-term arrhythmia recurrences were assessed.Patient characteristics include median age 14 years (1-18 years), median weight 52 kg (11-81 kg), normal cardiac anatomy (n = 6), d-transposition of great arteries post arterial switch repair (n = 2), anomalous coronary artery origin post repair (n = 1), and cardiac rhabdomyoma (n = 1). All patients underwent radiofrequency catheter ablation of ventricular arrhythmia with acute procedural success. LGE was identified at the reported ablation site in 9/10 patients, all arrhythmia-free at median 7 months follow-up. LGE was not visible in 1 patient who had recurrence of frequent premature ventricular contractions within 2 hours, confirmed on Holter at 1 and 21 months post procedure.Ventricular ablation lesion visibility by MRI in the acute post procedure setting is feasible. Lesions identifiable with MRI may correlate with clinical outcomes. Acute MRI identification of gaps or inadequate lesions may provide the unique temporal opportunity for additional ablation therapy to decrease arrhythmia recurrence.

Details

ISSN :
15408167
Volume :
28
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........8b4bab89204efd4b1f138cb9d51af467