Abstract

BackgroundThe lesion formation properties of a motorized rotational delivery (RAPID) mode, third-generation laser balloon (LB3) ablation compared to point-by-point laser ablation in patients with atrial fibrillation remain unclear.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to assess lesion characteristics and thermodynamics in LB3 ablation with a RAPID mode in vitro model.MethodsChicken muscles were cauterized using LB3 in RAPID mode with 13 W and 15 W and 50% overlapped point-by-point fashion with 7 W/30 seconds, 8.5 W/20 seconds, 10 W/20 seconds, and 12 W/20 seconds. Lesion depth, width, and continuity were compared. Lesion continuity was classified by the visible gap degree categorized from 1 (perfect) to 3 (poor). Thermodynamics and maximum tissue temperatures were assessed under infrared thermographic monitoring. Fifteen and 5 lesions were evaluated per ablation protocol for measurement of lesion size and continuity and for thermographic assessment, respectively.ResultsLesion depth and width were smaller in RAPID mode laser ablation than point-by-point laser ablation (P <.001). However, RAPID mode laser ablation revealed sufficient mean lesion depth of 5 mm or more. Lesion continuity was 1 (perfect) in all samples in RAPID mode laser ablation and point-by-point laser ablation (P = 1). Infrared thermographic observation demonstrated fast and gapless linear lesion formation with thermal stacking in RAPID mode laser ablation. Maximum tissue temperature was lower in RAPID mode laser ablation than point-by-point laser ablation (P <.001).ConclusionRAPID mode LB3 ablation could provide fast, gapless, and acceptable lesion formation with thermal stacking and moderate tissue temperature rise.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call