Abstract
Pulsed field ablation (PFA) may have a superior safety profile compared to other technologies, but it has the potential to cause gaseous microbubbles (MB), which may be associated with cerebral emboli. Limited relative safety data has been published regarding PFA in the left ventricle (LV). Healthy and chronic myocardial infarction (MI) swine underwent PFA (monopolar, biphasic, 25 Amps) in the LV using an irrigated focal catheter under intra-cardiac echocardiography (ICE) guidance for MB monitoring. Two control swine received air MBs through the lumen of the ablation catheter. Swine underwent brain MRI before and after PFA (or control air MB injection). Gross pathology and histology of brains with abnormal MRI findings were performed. Four healthy and 5 chronic MI swine underwent 124 left ventricular PFA applications. No PFA-related MB formation was noted on ICE. Both control swine developed multiple acute emboli in the thalamus and caudate on DWI, ADC, and FLAIR brain MRI images in response to air MB injection. Of the 9 PFA swine, there were no abnormalities on ADC or FLAIR images. There was one hyperintense focus in the left putamen on the DWI trace image, but the absence of ADC or FLAIR affirmation suggested it was artifact. Gross pathology and histopathology of this region did not detect any abnormalities. Focal monopolar biphasic PFA of both healthy and chronically infarcted left ventricular myocardium does not generate any MB or cerebral emboli observable on ICE and brain MRI.
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More From: Journal of interventional cardiac electrophysiology : an international journal of arrhythmias and pacing
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