Abstract

BackgroundPulsed-field ablation (PFA) is an emerging and promising nonthermal technology for cardiac ablation. The effective applied voltage to achieve adequate irreversible myocardial injury is not well studied. The pulsed-field strength remains independent of tissue contact; therefore, PFA is assumed to be an ablation technology, not mandating the need for tissue contact.ObjectiveDetermine the effect of applied voltage and distance to surface on depth of myocardial injury using PFA.MethodsA computational model was developed and validated based on extracted data from in vivo studies to examine the effect of different applied voltages and the impact of distance between the catheter and endocardial surface on the depth of irreversible myocardial injury using PFA.ResultsThe depth of lesions created by PFA are dose-dependent, and there is a direct correlation between applied PFA voltages and depth of irreversible myocardial injury. The minimum applied voltage of PFA required to create a lesion deeper than 1 mm is 300 volts. The catheter-tissue contact plays a pivotal role in determining lesion depth. With optimal catheter contact in the absence of trabeculation, the minimal applied energy required to achieve a 3-mm-deep lesion is 700 volts. A minor increase in the catheter-tissue distance of 1–2 mm doubles the minimum required applied voltage, increasing it to 1500 volts.ConclusionPFA is an important new technology that is proposed to be more efficacious and safer than currently used thermal ablation. Here we demonstrate the impact of dose dependence and the need for maintaining tissue contact during ablation.

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