Abstract

The impact of variability in irrigation rates and catheter orientation on radiofrequency ablation (RF) lesion creation has not been studied systematically for the uniformly irrigated 56-pore (56P) catheter. This study aimed to analyze the impact of irrigation flow rates (IFRs) and catheter orientation (CO) settings on RF lesions sizes produced by a 56P irrigation catheter in a power-controlled mode using an ex-vivo model. RF lesions were created in strips of chicken muscle in a saline bath heated to 37°C with 56P and 6P catheters using low flow rate (LFR) at 2 cc/min and standard flow (SFR) irrigation rates at 8 cc/min for 56P and 17 cc/min for 6P with horizontal (HO) and vertical (VO) catheter orientations. Ablation power of 20W was delivered for 30 seconds with a mean contact force of 10 g. Sixty RF lesions were analyzed. For the 56P catheter, in contrast to the 6P catheter lesion geometry was independent of CO and IFR in our model. Although 6P catheter had slightly deeper lesions, the overall lesion volumes were similar for 6P and 56P catheters. CO and IFR appeared to have minimal impact on lesion volume creation with 56P catheter. In head-to-head comparison the 6P and 56P irrigated catheters performed similarly.

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