Artigo Revisado por pares

The Convergent Procedure: A Multidisciplinary Atrial Fibrillation Treatment

2010; Carden Jennings Publishing Co.; Volume: 13; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1532/hsf98.20091112

ISSN

1522-6662

Autores

Andy C. Kiser, Mark Landers, Rodney Horton, Andrew Hume, Andrea Natale, Borut Geršak,

Tópico(s)

Cardiac pacing and defibrillation studies

Resumo

Persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) and long-standing persistent AF (LSPAF) are difficult to treat. Epicardial surgical and percutaneous catheter ablations have lower success rates in these patients. The convergent procedure, an endoscopic transdiaphragmatic ablation procedure with conventional percutaneous endocardial ablation, is examined.Twenty-eight patients with persistent AF or LSPAF underwent the convergent procedure. All underwent combined surgical epicardial radiofrequency ablation and electrophysiological transseptal endocardial ablation to electrically isolate the 4 pulmonary veins, to exclude the posterior left atrium, to ablate the coronary sinus, and to confirm block at the cavotricuspid isthmus. Follow-up was with 24-hour Holter monitoring at 3 months, and 24-hour or 7-day monitoring at 6 and 12 months.The mean duration of the procedure was 187 minutes (102 surgical ablation minutes; 85 endocardial ablation minutes). The mean total fluoroscopy time was 35.1 minutes. Two patients developed symptomatic pericardial effusions requiring percutaneous drainage, and 1 patient has demonstrated phrenic nerve paresis. There were no deaths. At 3 months, 87% were in sinus rhythm, and 43% were free of AF and antiarrhythmic medications (AADs). At 6 months, 76% were free from AF and AADs.The convergent procedure effectively combines surgical and electrophysiological AF expertise to provide a viable treatment option to patients with persistent AF or LSPAF. Long-term follow-up is under way.

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