Abstract
Although current surgical procedures result in a high success rate for atrial fibrillation, they are not guided by electrophysiologic findings in individual patients and thus might include unnecessary incisions in some patients or be inappropriate for other patients. We sought to determine whether intraoperative mapping is beneficial for the surgical treatment of atrial fibrillation. A 256-channel 3-dimensional dynamic mapping system with custom-made epicardial patch electrodes was used to examine the atrial activation during atrial fibrillation and to determine the optimal procedure in 37 patients with continuous and 9 patients with intermittent atrial fibrillation intraoperatively. Surgical intervention for atrial fibrillation was not indicated in 3 patients in whom the atrial electrograms had a low voltage over a broad area. Concurrent, multiple, and repetitive activations arising from the pulmonary veins or left atrial appendage were observed in all patients. A simple left atrial procedure consisting of pulmonary vein isolation and left atrial incisions without any right atrial incisions was performed in 8 patients in whom the right atrial activation was passive, and all (100%) were cured of atrial fibrillation. The radial procedure was performed in the remaining 35 patients, and 31 (89%) of the patients were cured of atrial fibrillation. In this subset of patients, 10 exhibited reentrant or focal activation in the posterior left atrium between the right and left pulmonary veins and required an additional linear ablation on the posterior left atrium. The total amount of postoperative bleeding after the simple left atrial procedure was significantly less than after the radial procedure (378 +/- 135 vs 711 +/- 364 mL, P = .03). The right and left atrial transport functions were well preserved after both the radial and simple left atrial procedures. Intraoperative mapping facilitates determining the optimal procedure for atrial fibrillation in each patient.
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More From: The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
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