Does real-time contact force monitoring during radiofrequency ablation improve lesion formation and reduce atrial fibrillation recurrence in patients undergoing pulmonary vein isolation?
Patients undergoing pulmonary vein (PV) isolation for atrial fibrillation, as well as pre-clinical experimental models.
Radiofrequency ablation guided by real-time contact force measurement.
Ablation with lower contact force (e.g., average CF <10 g or Force-Time Integral <500 gs) or without contact force guidance.
Atrial fibrillation recurrence and radiofrequency lesion size.
Real-time contact force monitoring during radiofrequency ablation is a major determinant of lesion effectiveness and is associated with reduced atrial fibrillation recurrence when optimal force parameters are achieved.
During radiofrequency (RF) ablation, low electrode-tissue contact force (CF) is associated with ineffective RF lesion formation, whereas excessive CF may increase the risk of steam pop and perforation. Recently, ablation catheters using two technologies have been developed to measure real-time catheter-tissue CF. One catheter uses three optical fibers to measure microdeformation of a deformable body in the catheter tip. The other catheter uses a small spring connecting the ablation tip electrode to the catheter shaft with a magnetic transmitter and sensors to measure microdeflection of the spring. Pre-clinical experimental studies have shown that 1) at constant RF power and application time, RF lesion size significantly increases with increasing CF; 2) the incidence of steam pop and thrombus also increase with increasing CF; 3) modulating RF power based on CF (i.e, high RF power at low CF and lower RF power at high CF) results in a similar and predictable RF lesion size. In clinical studies in patients undergoing pulmonary vein (PV) isolation, CF during mapping in the left atrium and PVs showed a wide range of CF and transient high CF. The most common high CF site was located at the anterior/rightward left atrial roof, directly beneath the ascending aorta. There was a poor relationship between CF and previously used surrogate parameters for CF (unipolar or bipolar atrial potential amplitude and impedance). Patients who underwent PV isolation with an average CF of 20g had lower AF recurrence. AF recurred within 12 months in 6 of 8 patients (75%) who had a mean Force-Time Integral (FTI, area under the curve for contact force vs. time) 1000 gs. In another study, controlling RF power based on CF prevented steam pop and impedance rise without loss of lesion effectiveness. These studies confirm that CF is a major determinant of RF lesion size and future systems combining CF, RF power and application time may provide real-time assessment of lesion formation.
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Hiroshi Nakagawa
Warren M. Jackman
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
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Nakagawa et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d732ccc74376700bf3081b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4022/jafib.1027