OBJECTIVE: Cardiac catheter cryoablation is a safer alternative to radiofrequency ablation for arrhythmia treatment, but electrophysiological (EP) effects during and after freezing are not adequately characterized. The goal of this study was to determine transient and permanent temperature induced EP effects, during and after localized tissue freezing. METHODS: Conduction in right (RV) and left ventricles (LV) was studied by optical activation mapping during and after cryoablation in paced, isolated Langendorff-perfused porcine hearts. Cryoablation was performed endocardially (n=4) or epicardially (n=4) by a cryoprobe cooled to -120 °C for 8 minutes. Epicardial surface temperature was imaged with an infrared camera. Viability staining was performed after ablation. Motion compensation and co-registration was performed between optical mapping data, temperature image data, and lesion images. RESULTS: Cryoablation produced lesions 14.9 +/- 3.1 mm in diameter and 5.8 +/- 1.7 mm deep. A permanent lesion was formed in tissue cooled below -5 +/- 4 °C. Transient EP changes observed at temperatures between 17 and 37 °C during cryoablation surrounding the frozen tissue region directly correlated with local temperature, and include action potential (AP) duration prolongation, decrease in AP magnitude, and slowing in conduction velocity (Q10=2.0). Transient conduction block was observed when epicardial temperature reached <17 °C, but completely resolved upon tissue rewarming, within 5 minutes. CONCLUSION: Transient EP changes were observed surrounding the permanent cryo lesion (<-5 °C), including conduction block (-5 to 17 °C), and reduced conduction velocity (>17 °C). SIGNIFICANCE: The observed changes explain effects observed during clinical cryoablation, including transient increases in effective refractory period, transient conduction block, and transient slowing of conduction. The presented quantitative data on temperature dependence of EP effects may enable the prediction of the effects of clinical cryoablation devices.
OBJECTIVE: Cardiac catheter cryoablation is a safer alternative to radiofrequency ablation for arrhythmia treatment, but electrophysiological (EP) effects during and after freezing are not adequately characterized. The goal of this study was to determine transient and permanent temperature induced EP effects, during and after localized tissue freezing. METHODS: Conduction in right (RV) and left ventricles (LV) was studied by optical activation mapping during and after cryoablation in paced, isolated Langendorff-perfused porcine hearts. Cryoablation was performed endocardially (n=4) or epicardially (n=4) by a cryoprobe cooled to -120 °C for 8 minutes. Epicardial surface temperature was imaged with an infrared camera. Viability staining was performed after ablation. Motion compensation and co-registration was performed between optical mapping data, temperature image data, and lesion images. RESULTS: Cryoablation produced lesions 14.9 +/- 3.1 mm in diameter and 5.8 +/- 1.7 mm deep. A permanent lesion was formed in tissue cooled below -5 +/- 4 °C. Transient EP changes observed at temperatures between 17 and 37 °C during cryoablation surrounding the frozen tissue region directly correlated with local temperature, and include action potential (AP) duration prolongation, decrease in AP magnitude, and slowing in conduction velocity (Q10=2.0). Transient conduction block was observed when epicardial temperature reached <17 °C, but completely resolved upon tissue rewarming, within 5 minutes. CONCLUSION: Transient EP changes were observed surrounding the permanent cryo lesion (<-5 °C), including conduction block (-5 to 17 °C), and reduced conduction velocity (>17 °C). SIGNIFICANCE: The observed changes explain effects observed during clinical cryoablation, including transient increases in effective refractory period, transient conduction block, and transient slowing of conduction. The presented quantitative data on temperature dependence of EP effects may enable the prediction of the effects of clinical cryoablation devices.
Authors: Hiroshi Aoyama; Hiroshi Nakagawa; Jan V Pitha; George S Khammar; Krishnaswamy Chandrasekaran; Kagari Matsudaira; Tetsuo Yagi; Katsuaki Yokoyama; Ralph Lazzara; Warren M Jackman Journal: J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol Date: 2005-11
Authors: Kathryn K Collins; Anne M Dubin; Nancy A Chiesa; Kishor Avasarala; George F Van Hare Journal: Heart Rhythm Date: 2006-02-28 Impact factor: 6.343
Authors: David E Leaf; Jonathan E Feig; Carolina Vasquez; Pamela L Riva; Cindy Yu; Joshua M Lader; Andrianos Kontogeorgis; Elvera L Baron; Nicholas S Peters; Edward A Fisher; David E Gutstein; Gregory E Morley Journal: Circ Res Date: 2008-07-03 Impact factor: 17.367