Literature DB >> 31758504

Esophageal cooling for protection during left atrial ablation: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Lisa Wm Leung1, Mark M Gallagher1, Pasquale Santangeli2, Cory Tschabrunn2, Jose M Guerra3, Bieito Campos3, Jamal Hayat4, Folefac Atem5, Steven Mickelsen6, Erik Kulstad7.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Thermal damage to the esophagus is a risk from radiofrequency (RF) ablation of the left atrium for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF). The most extreme type of thermal injury results in atrio-esophageal fistula (AEF) and a correspondingly high mortality rate. Various strategies for reducing esophageal injury have been developed, including power reduction, esophageal deviation, and esophageal cooling. One method of esophageal cooling involves the direct instillation of cold water or saline into the esophagus during RF ablation. Although this method provides limited heat-extraction capacity, studies of it have suggested potential benefit. We sought to perform a meta-analysis of published studies evaluating the use of esophageal cooling via direct liquid instillation for the reduction of thermal injury during RF ablation.
METHODS: We searched PubMed for studies that used esophageal cooling to protect the esophagus from thermal injury during RF ablation. We then performed a meta-analysis using a random effects model to calculate estimated effect size with 95% confidence intervals, with an outcome of esophageal lesions stratified by severity, as determined by post-procedure endoscopy.
RESULTS: A total of 9 studies were identified and reviewed. After excluding preclinical and mathematical model studies, 3 were included in the meta-analysis, totaling 494 patients. Esophageal cooling showed a tendency to shift lesion severity downward, such that total lesions did not show a statistically significant change (OR 0.6, 95% CI 0.15 to 2.38). For high-grade lesions, a significant OR of 0.39 (95% CI 0.17 to 0.89) in favor of esophageal cooling was found, suggesting that esophageal cooling, even with a low-capacity thermal extraction technique, reduces the severity of lesions resulting from RF ablation.
CONCLUSIONS: Esophageal cooling reduces the severity of the lesions that may result from RF ablation, even when relatively low heat extraction methods are used, such as the direct instillation of small volumes of cold liquid. Further investigation of this approach is warranted, particularly with higher heat extraction capacity techniques.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Atrial fibrillation; Atrio-esophageal fistula; Esophageal cooling; Esophageal injury; Radiofrequency ablation

Year:  2019        PMID: 31758504      PMCID: PMC7591442          DOI: 10.1007/s10840-019-00661-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Interv Card Electrophysiol        ISSN: 1383-875X            Impact factor:   1.900


Introduction

Thermal damage to the esophagus is a risk from radiofrequency (RF) ablation or cryoablation of the left atrium for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF) [1-3]. The most extreme type of thermal injury is an atrio-esophageal fistula (AEF), with a mortality rate of 80% or more [4-8]. Various strategies for protecting the esophagus during RF ablation or reducing the severity of injury have been developed, including power reduction, avoidance of greater contact force, temperature monitoring, esophageal deviation, and esophageal cooling, with varying degrees of success [9-11]. Esophageal cooling for the purpose of protecting the esophagus during RF ablation has been investigated in multiple studies [12-20]. The techniques used have included the insertion of expandable balloon devices or cooling sacs that circulate water, and the direct instillation of ice-cold water or saline into the esophagus. The study designs have included animal models and mathematical models as well as human clinical studies. Most of the human clinical studies have used direct instillation of ice cold water or saline as the cooling method, and for this reason, we performed a meta-analysis of the data obtained in these studies to examine their range of effect sizes and estimate the potential efficacy of esophageal cooling for protection during RF ablation.

Methods

Data sources and search strategy

Using PubMed, we searched the literature dated from 1985 (prior to the earliest reports of endocardial ablation to treat atrial fibrillation) to June 2019 for studies published on esophageal cooling during cardiac ablation. We conducted a broad search with the following Boolean structure: (esophag* OR oesophag*) AND cooling AND (ablation OR fibrillation). We did not restrict the search to studies published in English only. Details of the systematic review were submitted for registration in PROSPERO on June 21, 2019, with further details describing the statistical plan added on September 11, 2019.

Eligibility criteria

We excluded preclinical studies, bench-top, agar phantom, and mathematical model studies, and studies that did not include formal endoscopy as an outcome measure.

Data collection

The primary data of interest were esophageal lesions identified endoscopically after RF ablation. Because we anticipated inconsistency in the categorization of lesion severity, we aimed to simplify all lesion severity measurement into severe lesions characterized by the presence of ulceration and mild to moderate lesions encompassing all other abnormalities. Studies identified were then assessed for quality using the Newcastle Ottawa Scale, which evaluates three quality parameters (selection, comparability, and outcome) divided across eight specific items. Each item on the scale is scored with up to one point, except for comparability, which can be adapted to the specific topic of interest to score up to two points, such that the maximum for each study is 9, with studies having less than 5 points being identified as representing a high risk of bias [21].

Statistical analysis

For this meta-analysis, we input the study data into Review Manager 5.3, and we present the results graphically. SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) was used for additional analyses. The Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel (CMH) method was employed to test the null hypothesis that the response rate is the same for the two arms (control versus treatment), after adjusting for possible differences in study response rates. Furthermore, we fitted a random effect model using SAS procedures GLIMMIX and NLMIXED by treating the studies as a random effect. Because lesion grades are often considered to be dichotomized into those that are likely to progress to AEF and those that are not, we initially analyzed the data as a binary outcome (high-grade lesions concerning for progression versus low grade lesions likely to heal spontaneously). Then, to further estimate effect size, we used an ordinal logistic random intercept model, taking into account the ordered nature of lesion grading (low to high, numerically).

Results

We identified 9 studies using the above criteria. Five of these studies were excluded for being non-clinical. Berjano et al. utilized a finite element model in three dimensions to investigate the effects of a cooled intraesophageal balloon [12]. Lequerica et al. performed studies using an agar phantom-based model that was built to provide temperature readings at points between the esophageal lumen and the myocardium [13, 14]. Arruda et al. studied a custom developed system utilizing temperature-controlled saline or water in an in vitro lamb heart and esophagus preparation, followed by an in vivo model with six dogs [15]. Scanavacca et al. presented a study of the use of a saline filled esophageal balloon to attempt esophageal protection in a dog model [17]. A clinical study of 8 patients by Tsuchiya et al. was excluded for not using endoscopy to determine the presence of lesions after RF ablation [16]. The remaining 3 studies included a total of 494 patients. Details of these studies and the characteristics of the patients are shown in Tables 1, 2, 3.Because the manner of grading lesions varied among the studies, we incorporated the scales used in the three studies into a common stratification (Grades I, II, III, and IV).
Table 1

Characteristics of included studies, population demographics, and comorbidities

StudyDesignNumber of patientsPatient ageGender (% male)AF subtype (% paroxysmal)BMIHTNDiabetesCHFEjection fraction
John et al.Prospective observational7663.5 +/− 1063.2%40.8%30.5 +/− 5.168.4%18.7%26.3%55.5 +/− 9.1%
Kuwahara et al.Randomized control10063 +/− 8.740.0%32.0%24 +/− 2.0N/AN/AN/A64 +/− 6.6%
Sohara et al.Prospective observational31863.3 +/− 7.972.6%57.2%N/A14.8%4.1%N/A66.8 +/− 6.8%
Table 2

Ablation techniques and characteristics for each included study

StudyAblation technologyPowerMapping technologyAblation typeAverage Contact ForceMean RF time per lesion (seconds)AnesthesiaEndoscopy timing
John et al.RF open-irrigation, 3.5-mm-tip, 8-Fr, force-sensing catheter (SmartTouch)24–28 WCARTO mapping system and Pentaray NAV multipolar mapping catheterBilateral antral PVI, creation of a left atrial roof and floor line, and ablation across the mitral isthmus10 g12.3 +/− 5.3GeneralWithin 24 h of the procedure
Kuwahara et al.3.5 mm irrigated-tip ablation catheter (Thermocool, Biosense Webster, Inc.)25–30 WCARTO systemCircumferential PVI with focal ablation, and creation of left atrial roof or mitral isthmus lines with posterior wall isolation in non-paroxysmal AFN/AN/AConscious sedationWithin 24 h of the procedure
Sohara et al.12F radiofrequency hot balloon catheter (Hayama Arrhythmia Institute, Kanagawa, Japan)N/ACARTO systemBalloon-based box isolationN/AN/AGeneralWithin 3 days of the procedure
Table 3

Characteristics of temperature monitoring and esophageal cooling utilized in each included study

StudyTemperature sensor typeTemperature sensor characteristicsGastric tube typeCoolantCooling thresholdFollow-up duration
John et al.18-Fr esophageal temperature probe (400 series M1024215, GE Healthcare, Chicago, IL)Tube diameter 6 mm, cuff diameter 8.8 mm, single thermistor inside of the cuff at the distal tip18-Fr orogastric tube (nasogastric sump tube 0046180, Bard, Inc., Covington, GA)20 mL ice-cold saline0.5 °C increase in temperature from baselineN/A
Kuwahara et al.A multi-thermocouple temperature probe (Sensitherm, St Jude Medical)Three thermocouples; one of which was placed at the same level of the esophagus as the site of RF energy delivery on the LA posterior wallUnspecified gastric tube5 mL ice-water (0 °C)42 °C temperature peakUp to 8 weeks
Sohara et al.Thermocouple thermometer (Delta Ohm, Caselle di Selvazzano, PD, Italy)Thermal sensor of a deflectable, 4-mm tip ablation catheterUnspecified gastric tube coated with xylocaine jelly10–20 mL ionized contrast medium (Gastrografin) or nonionized low osmotic contrast medium (iopamidol) diluted 1:2 with physiologic saline refrigerated to about 10 °C43 °C temperature peak (group B) or 39 °C temperature peak (group C)>10 months minimum, mean 3.6 years
Characteristics of included studies, population demographics, and comorbidities Ablation techniques and characteristics for each included study Characteristics of temperature monitoring and esophageal cooling utilized in each included study John et al. studied 76 patients, half of which were actively cooled by injecting a 20 mL bolus of ice-cold saline via orogastric tube into the upper esophagus if/when the luminal esophageal temperature (LET) increased by 0.5 °C above baseline [20]. The authors found that this method of esophageal cooling did not decrease the overall incidence of thermal lesions, but noted a trend toward fewer severe lesions with cooling (Fig 1). The authors graded lesions as follows: grade 0, no esophageal lesion; grade 1, mucosal damage <1 cm width; grade 2, mucosal damage 1–3 cm width; grade 3, mucosal damage >3 cm width or visualization of deeper layer; and grade 4, bleeding ulcer or with overlying clot. Assessment of the study quality resulted in a score of 8 using the Newcastle Ottawa Scale.
Fig. 1

Results from John et al. Patients in the treatment group were actively cooled by injecting a 20 mL bolus of ice-cold saline via orogastric tube into the upper esophagus if/when the LET increased by 0.5 °C above baseline. Grade III and grade IV lesions are shown separately

Results from John et al. Patients in the treatment group were actively cooled by injecting a 20 mL bolus of ice-cold saline via orogastric tube into the upper esophagus if/when the LET increased by 0.5 °C above baseline. Grade III and grade IV lesions are shown separately Kuwahara et al. studied 100 patients using very small volumes (5 mL) of ice water as the coolant for half of them. This volume was injected prior to RF energy delivery as well as subsequently if/when the LET reached 42 °C [18]. The authors found that this approach reduced the severity of esophageal lesions, but did not reduce the incidence: lesions occurred in 20% of the treatment group and 22% of the controls, with 3 moderate and 7 mild in the cooled group and 3 severe, 1 moderate, and 7 mild in the control group (Fig 2). The authors graded the severity of the lesions as mild, moderate, or severe, according to their extent and color. Assessment of the study quality resulted in a score of 8 using the Newcastle Ottawa Scale.
Fig. 2

Results from Kuwahara et al. Patients in the treatment group were actively cooled by injecting 5 mL of ice water prior to RF energy delivery and subsequently when the LET reached 42 °C. The Grade III/IV lesion category represents all lesions qualitatively graded as “severe,” with mild lesions in Grade I and moderate lesions in Grade II

Results from Kuwahara et al. Patients in the treatment group were actively cooled by injecting 5 mL of ice water prior to RF energy delivery and subsequently when the LET reached 42 °C. The Grade III/IV lesion category represents all lesions qualitatively graded as “severe,” with mild lesions in Grade I and moderate lesions in Grade II Sohara et al. studied 318 consecutive patients divided into three groups, one receiving only temperature monitoring without cooling, the second receiving temperature monitoring with cooling when the LET exceeded 43 °C, and the third receiving temperature monitoring with cooling when the LET exceeded 39 °C. These authors used cooled saline mixed with Gastrografin or iopamidol as the coolant. The total volumes injected were slightly higher than those used by John et al. and Kuwahara et al. but were still limited (10–20 mL in repeated injected aliquots with a temperature of approximately 10 °C).[19] The percentage of patients free from any ulceration or erosion in each group was found to be 63.6%, 87.5%, and 95.2%, respectively (Fig 3). The authors classified the lesions as normal (score 1), erosion (patchy mucosal ulceration: score 2), mild ulcer (necrosis less than 3 mm in diameter with red spot: score 3), severe ulcer (necrosis more than 3 mm in diameter with red spot and/or with a hemorrhagic appearance, often with fibrinoid material: score 4). Assessment of the study quality resulted in a score of 9 using the Newcastle Ottawa Scale.
Fig. 3

Results from Sohara et al. Patients in group A received only LET monitoring without cooling of the esophagus. Patients in groups B and C received LET monitoring with esophageal cooling when the LET exceeded 43 °C and 39 °C, respectively. Cooling was by infusion of cooled saline mixed with Gastrografin. The Grade III/IV lesion category represents all lesions graded as ulcers (scored as 3 or 4 by Sohara et al.)

Results from Sohara et al. Patients in group A received only LET monitoring without cooling of the esophagus. Patients in groups B and C received LET monitoring with esophageal cooling when the LET exceeded 43 °C and 39 °C, respectively. Cooling was by infusion of cooled saline mixed with Gastrografin. The Grade III/IV lesion category represents all lesions graded as ulcers (scored as 3 or 4 by Sohara et al.) The studies by Kuwahara et al. and John et al. show a clear shift from high-grade to lower-grade lesions between the control and treatment arms [18, 20]. In contrast, the data from Sohara et al. show a general reduction in lesions of all grades [19]. The forest plot comparing the outcome of all lesions (grades I, II, III, and IV) as events between control and treatment arms is shown in Fig 4. Although fewer lesions occurred in the treatment arms of the Sohara et al. and Kuwahara et al. studies, in meta-analysis this decrease did not reach statistical significance (OR 0.6, 95% CI 0.15 to 2.38).
Fig. 4.

Forest plot comparing the outcome of all lesions in the three clinical studies. Events are the occurrence of grade I, II, III, and IV lesions

Forest plot comparing the outcome of all lesions in the three clinical studies. Events are the occurrence of grade I, II, III, and IV lesions The slight increase in low-grade lesions seen in the John et al. and Kuwahara et al. studies is shown in the forest plot in Fig 5, with an OR of 1.0 (95% CI 0.26 to 3.93). The number of low-grade lesions is not significantly impacted with this treatment.
Fig. 5.

Forest plot comparing the outcome of low-grade lesions in the three clinical studies. Events are the occurrence of grade I and II lesions

Forest plot comparing the outcome of low-grade lesions in the three clinical studies. Events are the occurrence of grade I and II lesions Evaluating the occurrence of high-grade lesions (grade III and IV) results in the forest plot shown in Fig 6, demonstrating a significant OR of 0.39 (95% CI 0.17 to 0.89) in favor of the treatment arm. Separately, using the CMH method, we obtained a significant p value of 0.016 indicating that the association between treatment and lesion grade remains strong. Furthermore, in a binary logistic regression model, an OR of 0.46 (95% CI 0.28 to 0.75) was found.
Fig. 6

Forest plot comparing the outcome of severe lesions. Events are the occurrence of grade III/IV lesions

Forest plot comparing the outcome of severe lesions. Events are the occurrence of grade III/IV lesions The I2 statistic, which describes the percentage of total variation across studies that is due to heterogeneity rather than chance, is shown in each of Figs. 4, 5, and 6. For the analysis using an outcome of severe lesions (Fig. 6), the I2 = 0%, which indicates no observed heterogeneity. Increasing heterogeneity of effect is seen (shown in the forest plots) when looking at the outcome of all lesions, and low-grade lesions, in Figs. 4 and 5, respectively. Finally, using an ordinal logistic random intercept model rather than dichotomized outcome, we used GLIMMIX and NLMIXED in SAS to obtain an additional estimate of effect size for each category of lesion independently. This method showed that esophageal cooling by the method of direct instillation of cold water or saline used in these studies results in a point estimate of a −23% reduction in lesion grade, with 95% CI ranging from −85% to +38%.

Discussion

Esophageal injury from RF ablation remains a feared complication in the treatment of atrial fibrillation, and a variety of techniques have been developed to reduce this risk. Esophageal cooling has shown promise in a number of studies, with such cooling being brought about by the instillation of cold water or saline directly into the esophagus via orogastric tube. Even with the relatively high heat capacity of water, the amount of thermal energy that can actually be absorbed by this method is limited by the low total volumes of liquid instilled. Nevertheless, our meta-analysis of three studies that used this approach suggests that cooling in this manner offers a clinically significant protective effect from severe lesions, and provides a 61% reduction in high-grade lesion formation (with a 95% CI of 11% to 83% reduction). Prototypes of various balloon devices have been evaluated for possible use in preventing thermal injury during RF ablation [13-16]. These devices provided flow rates of 25 mL to 300 mL per minute, and although preclinical as well as mathematical models of the devices suggested benefits in lesion reduction, none of the early prototypes evolved into commercially available products. A more recently developed intraesophageal cooling device has a flow rate of up to 1900 mL per minute. This device was designed for whole-body temperature manipulation, for which it is commercially available, and has been shown to have protective effects in animal and mathematical models of RF ablation. It is currently under clinical investigation for use during RF ablation, and preclinical data suggest a close correlation between water temperature and protective effect, such that increased heat extraction results in greater reduction in lesion thickness [22, 23]. Recent data in the burn literature also suggests that there are improved outcomes from thermal burns (reduced full thickness depth, skin grafting requirement, hospitalization, and other operative interventions) with cooling, with a dose-response relationship noted between the odds of grafting and duration of cool running water, which may offer further support for the idea of a threshold effect to preventing progression of thermal injury after the initial thermal insult [24]. A recent meta-analysis of two studies that used the direct instillation of ice-cold water to cool the esophagus focused on the outcome of overall lesion frequency, but did not distinguish between lesion severity and lesion frequency, and produced inconclusive results [25]. In contrast, in our meta-analysis of 3 studies that used this cooling method, we stratified the lesions according to their severity and found that cooling by this method reduced the number of high-grade lesions. Although the mechanism of AEF formation is not well understood, there is general agreement that thermal injury is a precursor and that higher-grade thermal injury has a higher risk of progression to AEF [26]. Analyzing each lesion grade independently in a statistical model allows an alternative approach to estimate effect size that may provide further refinement of the estimate, at the cost of decreased precision of the estimate. The point estimate that we found using this approach suggests a reduction in high-grade lesions of −23%, although a higher number of patients with a greater number of high-grade lesions would be necessary to narrow the confidence intervals around this estimate, which, with the population included here, ranges from −85% to +38%. It seems likely that cooling methods that have a higher heat extraction capacity will lead to increased effect size point estimates when the data are analyzed by either binary logistic or ordinal regression.

Limitations

The three studies that we analyzed differed in patient characteristics and other details as well as in the specific radiofrequency techniques and equipment used (see Tables 1, 2, 3). Nevertheless, all studies used radiofrequency ablation, and the variation in technology reflects current real-world practice. One of the studies randomized the patients. There was no description of any attempt at blinding the patients to the protection strategy used. Lesion grading varied between studies, but the scales used in each study fitted easily into a common stratification. The differences between the studies may serve to broaden the generalizability of this meta-analysis.

Conclusions

Esophageal cooling reduces the severity of the lesions that may result from RF ablation, even when relatively low heat extraction methods are used, such as the direct instillation of small amounts of cold liquid. Further investigation of esophageal cooling is warranted, particularly with higher heat extraction capacity techniques.
  22 in total

1.  Esophageal injury following left atrial ablation.

Authors:  Bashar J Qumseya; Fred Kusumoto; Herbert Wolfsen
Journal:  Gastroenterol Hepatol (N Y)       Date:  2012-06

Review 2.  Esophageal Injury and Atrioesophageal Fistula Caused by Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation.

Authors:  Sunil Kapur; Chirag Barbhaiya; Thomas Deneke; Gregory F Michaud
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2017-09-26       Impact factor: 29.690

3.  Atrial fibrillation ablation with esophageal cooling with a cooled water-irrigated intraesophageal balloon: a pilot study.

Authors:  Takeshi Tsuchiya; Keiichi Ashikaga; Susumu Nakagawa; Kiyoshi Hayashida; Hiroshi Kugimiya
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol       Date:  2006-12-01

Review 4.  Atrioesophageal fistula in the era of atrial fibrillation ablation: a review.

Authors:  Girish M Nair; Pablo B Nery; Calum J Redpath; Buu-Khanh Lam; David H Birnie
Journal:  Can J Cardiol       Date:  2013-12-20       Impact factor: 5.223

Review 5.  Luminal esophageal temperature monitoring to reduce esophageal thermal injury during catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation: A review.

Authors:  Anis John Kadado; Joseph G Akar; James P Hummel
Journal:  Trends Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2018-09-19       Impact factor: 6.677

6.  Oesophageal cooling with ice water does not reduce the incidence of oesophageal lesions complicating catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: randomized controlled study.

Authors:  Taishi Kuwahara; Atsushi Takahashi; Kenji Okubo; Katsumasa Takagi; Kazuya Yamao; Emiko Nakashima; Naohiko Kawaguchi; Masateru Takigawa; Yuji Watari; Tomoko Sugiyama; Keita Handa; Shigeru Kimura; Hiroyuki Hikita; Akira Sato; Kazutaka Aonuma
Journal:  Europace       Date:  2014-01-26       Impact factor: 5.214

7.  Prevalence of esophageal ulceration after atrial fibrillation ablation with the hot balloon ablation catheter: what is the value of esophageal cooling?

Authors:  Hiroshi Sohara; Shutaro Satake; Hiroshi Takeda; Yoshio Yamaguchi; Naoko Nagasu
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol       Date:  2014-03-24

8.  Cool Running Water First Aid Decreases Skin Grafting Requirements in Pediatric Burns: A Cohort Study of Two Thousand Four Hundred Ninety-five Children.

Authors:  Bronwyn R Griffin; Cody C Frear; Franz Babl; Ed Oakley; Roy M Kimble
Journal:  Ann Emerg Med       Date:  2019-08-29       Impact factor: 5.721

Review 9.  Left Atrial to Esophageal Fistula: A Case Report and Literature Review.

Authors:  Muhammad Yasir Khan; Waqas Javed Siddiqui; Praneet S Iyer; Ahmed Dirweesh; Nigahus Karabulut
Journal:  Am J Case Rep       Date:  2016-11-02

10.  Fatal esophageal-pericardial fistula as a complication of radiofrequency catheter ablation.

Authors:  Ali Zakaria; Kellen Hipp; Nicholas Battista; Emily Tommolino; Christian Machado
Journal:  SAGE Open Med Case Rep       Date:  2019-04-04
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  9 in total

1.  Preventing esophageal complications from atrial fibrillation ablation: A review.

Authors:  Lisa W M Leung; Zaki Akhtar; Mary N Sheppard; John Louis-Auguste; Jamal Hayat; Mark M Gallagher
Journal:  Heart Rhythm O2       Date:  2021-09-22

2.  Intraluminal Esophageal Temperature Monitoring Using the Circa S-Cath™ Temperature Probe to Guide Left Atrial Ablation in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation.

Authors:  Lisa Wm Leung; Zaki Akhtar; Jamal Hayat; Mark M Gallagher
Journal:  J Atr Fibrillation       Date:  2021-02-28

3.  Esophageal temperature during atrial fibrillation ablation poorly predicts esophageal injury: An observational study.

Authors:  Tarek Ayoub; Abdel Hadi El Hajjar; Gursukhman Deep Singh Sidhu; Arezu Bhatnagar; Yichi Zhang; Mario Mekhael; Charbel Noujaim; Lilas Dagher; Christopher Pottle; Nassir Marrouche
Journal:  Heart Rhythm O2       Date:  2021-11-05

Review 4.  Surgery and Catheter Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation: History, Current Practice, and Future Directions.

Authors:  Patrick M McCarthy; James L Cox; Olga N Kislitsina; Jane Kruse; Andrei Churyla; S Chris Malaisrie; Christopher K Mehta
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-12-31       Impact factor: 4.241

Review 5.  Protecting Against Collateral Damage to Non-cardiac Structures During Endocardial Ablation for Persistent Atrial Fibrillation.

Authors:  Lisa Wm Leung; Zaki Akhtar; Jamal Hayat; Mark M Gallagher
Journal:  Arrhythm Electrophysiol Rev       Date:  2022-04

6.  Effects of water cooling on laser-induced thermal damage in rat hepatectomy.

Authors:  Liyu Shan; Rongfeng Wang; Yue Wang; Huan Chen; Shasha Wei; Dinghui Dong; Yi Lv; Tao Ma
Journal:  Lasers Surg Med       Date:  2022-04-04

7.  Modeling esophageal protection from radiofrequency ablation via a cooling device: an analysis of the effects of ablation power and heart wall dimensions.

Authors:  Marcela Mercado; Lisa Leung; Mark Gallagher; Shailee Shah; Erik Kulstad
Journal:  Biomed Eng Online       Date:  2020-10-12       Impact factor: 2.819

8.  Why just detect? We can protect: A letter to the authors of "Prevention of left atrium esophagus fistula".

Authors:  Lisa W M Leung; Mark M Gallagher
Journal:  Pacing Clin Electrophysiol       Date:  2021-01-28       Impact factor: 1.976

9.  Randomized comparison of oesophageal protection with a temperature control device: results of the IMPACT study.

Authors:  Lisa W M Leung; Abhay Bajpai; Zia Zuberi; Anthony Li; Mark Norman; Riyaz A Kaba; Zaki Akhtar; Banu Evranos; Hanney Gonna; Idris Harding; Manav Sohal; Nawaf Al-Subaie; John Louis-Auguste; Jamal Hayat; Mark M Gallagher
Journal:  Europace       Date:  2021-02-05       Impact factor: 5.214

  9 in total

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