A concomitant bipolar maze procedure during mitral valve surgery resulted in 65.2% of patients achieving an atrial fibrillation burden <0.5% at 1-year follow-up via continuous monitoring.
Cohort (n=47)
Does a left atrial maze procedure with bipolar radiofrequency during mitral valve surgery reduce AF burden in patients with mitral valve disease and longstanding persistent AF?
A concomitant bipolar maze procedure during mitral valve surgery effectively treats longstanding persistent AF, with continuous monitoring showing 65% of patients maintaining an AF burden <0.5% at 1 year.
Continuous monitoring of cardiac rhythm may play an important role in measuring the true symptomatic/asymptomatic atrial fibrillation (AF) burden and improve the management of anti-arrhythmic and anti-thrombotic therapies. Forty-seven patients with mitral valve disease and longstanding persistent AF (LSPAF) underwent a left atrial maze procedure with bipolar radiofrequency and valve surgery. The follow-up data recorded by an implanted loop recorder were analysed after 3, 6 and 12 months. On discharge, 40 (85.1%) patients were in stable sinus rhythm, as documented by in-office electrocardiography (ECG), 4 (8.5%) were in pacemaker rhythm and 3 (6.4%) were in AF. One (2.1%) patient died after 7 months. On 12-month follow-up examination, 30 (65.2%) patients had an AF burden 0.5%. Two (4.3%) patients with AF recurrences were completely asymptomatic. Among the symptomatic events stored by the patients, only 27.6% was confirmed as genuine AF recurrences according to the concomitant ECG recorded by the implanted loop recorder. A concomitant bipolar maze procedure during mitral valve surgery is effective in treating AF, as proved by detailed 1-year continuous monitoring.
Bogachev‐Prokophiev et al. (Wed,) conducted a cohort in Mitral valve disease and longstanding persistent atrial fibrillation (n=47). Left atrial maze procedure with bipolar radiofrequency and valve surgery was evaluated on Atrial fibrillation burden <0.5% at 12-month follow-up. A concomitant bipolar maze procedure during mitral valve surgery resulted in 65.2% of patients achieving an atrial fibrillation burden <0.5% at 1-year follow-up via continuous monitoring.
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