Abstract

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Background Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR)-guided ablation therapy offers a unique opportunity and incentive to investigate acute ablation lesions. Until present, human studies only used T2-weighted imaging (T2WI) and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) to assess acute ablation lesions. Purpose To investigate the tissue characteristics of acute ablation lesions during CMR-guided atrial flutter ablation, by combining T2WI and LGE with first-pass perfusion and T1 mapping. Methods Thirteen patients with typical isthmus-dependent atrial flutter were prospectively enrolled and treated with CMR-guided ablation. Pre-ablation tissue characterisation consisted of T2WI and T1 mapping. Postablation imaging was performed directly after application of the primary ablation lesions and included T2WI (n=12), first-pass perfusion (n=9), LGE (n=9) and T1 mapping (n=7). For analysis of T2WI an edema ratio (ER; i.e. the signal intensity ratio between myocardium and reference skeletal muscle) > 2.0 was considered indicative of edema. Post-processing comprised native T1 measurements in three regions of the ablation line (near the tricuspid annulus, mid region, near the caval vein) on pre- and post-ablation images by two independent observers. For each region, the change in T1 value was expressed as the absolute increase (in ms) and the relative increase (in %). A third observer, blinded to the CMR results, reviewed which region(s) had required additional RF lesions after post-ablation CMR imaging. Results In 12 out of 13 patients CMR-guided atrial flutter ablation was successful, resulting in bidirectional conduction block. In 1 patient the ablation procedure was completed in the conventional electrophysiology lab, hampering acute post-ablation imaging. In all patients T2WI demonstrated edema in the ablation region. The ER increased from 1.6 ± 0.3 to 3.3 ± 0.5 post-ablation (p<0.001). Perfusion defects were present in 9/9 patients. The LGE images demonstrated hyperenhancement with a central area of hypo-enhancement in 9/9 patients, suggestive of ablation necrosis and previously reported areas of microvascular damage and hemorrhage. Right atrial T1 mapping was feasible in 20/21 regions (in 1 case artifacts from the adjacent catheter hampered analysis) and reproducible (r 0.981, ICC 0.939). The post-ablation increase in T1 value was significantly different between regions that did (n=10) and did not (n=10) require additional RF lesions, T1 increase was 46 ± 90ms versus 133 ± 69ms (p = 0.026), and 4.7 ± 9.1% versus 13.2 ± 6.8% (p = 0.028) respectively. Conclusion CMR tissue characterisation of acute ablation lesions during CMR-guided atrial flutter ablation demonstrates edema, perfusion defects, and necrosis with a core of microvascular damage. Atrial T1 mapping of the acute ablation lesion is feasible and reproducible, and might distinguish regions that require additional RF applications.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call