| Literature DB >> 33262897 |
Chase J Contino1, Max Weiss1, Michael P Riley2, Daniel R Frisch1.
Abstract
Radiofrequency catheter ablation is a safe and effective treatment option for atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT). A nonirrigated ablation catheter used in a temperature-controlled mode is traditionally used for AVNRT ablation due to the shallow lesion depth required for successful slow-pathway ablation. In this case, a nonirrigated ablation catheter established inadequate lesions to ablate the slow pathway successfully. The adoption of an irrigated contact-force ablation catheter used in a power-controlled mode was necessary to provide higher power and possibly create a deeper lesion to ablate the slow pathway successfully, thus eliminating AVNRT inducibility in this patient. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia; electrogram; radiofrequency catheter ablation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262897 PMCID: PMC7685312 DOI: 10.19102/icrm.2020.111103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Innov Card Rhythm Manag ISSN: 2156-3977
Ablation Characteristics of the Two Lesions that Successfully Ablated the Slow-pathway Region
| Lesion | FTI (LSI) | Average/Max Force | Power | Impedance Drop |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (60 seconds) | 864 (5.2) | 14/28 g | 20–25 W at 48 seconds | From 139 to 118 Ω = 21 Ω |
| 2 (60 seconds) | 442 (4.6) | 7/11 g | 20–25 W | From 144 to 109 Ω = 35 Ω |
FTI: force–time integral; LSI: lesion size index.