Vein of Marshall ethanol infusion typically induced low voltage at the inferior ridge (82.5%) and the first half of the mitral isthmus (92.1%), covering a median left atrial surface of 3.6%.
Observational (n=114)
Does vein of Marshall ethanol infusion create predictable low voltage areas in the left atrium in patients undergoing atrial fibrillation ablation?
Vein of Marshall ethanol infusion reliably creates localized low-voltage areas at the inferior ridge and adjacent mitral isthmus, covering a small percentage of the total left atrial surface.
INTRODUCTION: Systematic and quantitative descriptions of vein of Marshall (VOM)-induced tissue ablation are lacking. We sought to characterize the distribution of low voltage observed in the left atrium (LA) after VOM ethanol infusion. METHODS AND RESULTS: The distribution of ethanol-induced low voltage was evaluated by comparing high-density maps performed before and after VOM ethanol infusion in 114 patients referred for atrial fibrillation ablation. The two most frequently impacted segments were the inferior portion of the ridge (82.5%) and the first half of the mitral isthmus (pulmonary vein side) (92.1%). Low-voltage absence in these typical areas resulted from inadvertent ethanol infusion in the left atrial appendage vein (n = 3), initial VOM dissection (n = 3), or a "no branches" VOM morphology (n = 1). Visible anastomosis of the VOM with roof or posterior veins more frequently resulted in low-voltage extension beyond typical areas, toward the entire left antrum (19.0% vs. 1.9%, p = .0045) or the posterior LA (39.7% vs. 3.8%, p < .001) but with a limited positive predictive value ranging from 29.4% to 43.5%. Ethanol-induced low voltage covered a median LA surface of 3.6% (1.9%-5.0%) and did not exceed 8% of the LA surface in 90% of patients. CONCLUSION: VOM ethanol infusion typically locates at the inferior ridge and the adjacent half of the mitral isthmus. Low-voltage extensions can be anticipated but not guaranteed by the presence of visible anastomosis of the VOM with roof or posterior veins.
Kamakura et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Atrial fibrillation (n=114). Vein of Marshall (VOM) ethanol infusion vs. Baseline (before VOM ethanol infusion) was evaluated on Distribution of ethanol-induced low voltage. Vein of Marshall ethanol infusion typically induced low voltage at the inferior ridge (82.5%) and the first half of the mitral isthmus (92.1%), covering a median left atrial surface of 3.6%.
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