Improved Ablation Procedures with Cardiac MRI | MRI
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MRI Improved Ablation Procedures with Cardiac MRI

Improved Ablation Procedures with Cardiac MRI

Radiology News

MRIAs per studies conducted by researchers from  the University of Michigan Health System, Cardiac MRI can help detect  radiofrequency ablation lesions in patients treated for ventricular arrhythmias.

They performed cardiac MRI on 35 consecutive patients without structural heart disease who were referred for ventricular arrhythmia ablation before and after the procedure. All antiarrhythmic drugs were discontinued after the procedure, and 24-hour Holter monitor recording and an echocardiogram were performed at three- to six-month follow-up and again if palpitations recurred.

The procedure was successful in 29 patients (83%) and reduced the mean burden of premature ventricular complexes among those who experienced them frequently from 22% to 4% (P<.0001). The researchers identified new-site delayed-enhanced ablation lesions in 25 patients at a mean of 19 month follow-up. The lesions had a mean volume of 1.4 cm3 and a mean endocardial area of 3.5 cm2. They determined that patients with the largest lesions (mean volume, 2.9 cm3; endocardial area, 6.4 cm2) had arrhythmias that originated in the papillary muscles. Additional findings confirmed the previously reported correlation between lesion size and the duration of radiofrequency energy delivered (P<.001).

“Identification of ablation lesions in patients with a failed procedure identified the sites where ineffective radiofrequency energy lesions were created,” the researchers wrote.

According to Saman Nazarian, MD, of the division of cardiology and cardiac arrhythmia at John’s Hopkins University in Baltimore, Incorporating cardiac MRI into available techniques to identify scar arrhythmia substrates and monitor lesion formation may result in improved safety and efficacy during ventricular tachycardia ablation.

This methodology can provide information regarding a dimension of ventricular muscle previously untapped due to limitations of surface mapping. Ultimately, real-time cardiac MRI guidance of ventricular tachycardia ablation may provide the electrophysiologist with live information regarding the underlying scar substrate for ventricular tachycardia and allow precise titration of lesions, Nazarian added.

Source: University of Michigan

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