Abstract

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Backgrounds: Pulsed field ablation (PFA) represents a cardiac specific energy source for atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation. The correlation among this remarkable technique, the incidence of silent cerebral ischemic phenomena (SCIP), and the clinical impact on serum S100B release, a well-known neural injury relevant biomarker concomitant to denervation of the intrinsic cardiac autonomic nervous system during AF ablation, has been unclear. Aims This study thought to reveal the "triangle correlation" by investigating the serum S100B increase, incidence of SCIP on cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and its interactive correlation in PFA using the FARAPULSE system. Methods and Results Pre- and postprocedural serum S100B was analyzed in a total of 85 patients who underwent AF ablation using the FARAPULSE PFA device. Cerebral MRI was performed subsequently 24-48 hours after procedure. All PVs (332 PVs) were successfully isolated solely with PFA. No additional left atrial mapping using other catheters was performed. The median overall serum S100B increase from the preprocedural value was 0.01μg/l (-0.02 – 0.04μg/l). Asymptomatic SCIP were detected on MRI in 10/53 patients (18.9 %). Of those, the patients with SCIP demonstrated a significantly higher S100B release (0.04, 0.02 – 0.16μg/l vs. without SCIP:0.01, -0.04 – 0.03μg/l, p = 0.0038). Receiver operating characteristic curve revealed a predictive cut-off point for SCIP of 0.04 μg/l (sensitivity:0.7, specificity: 0.49). Conclusions We revealed no clear detectable impact of PFA on S100B release, highlighting the cardioselectivity with limited concomitant denervation. SCIP was detected approximately in a one-fifth after procedures and was a potential confounder of the higher S100B increase.

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