Treatment Overview
If medication is not effective or not tolerated for
atrial fibrillation, a nonsurgical procedure called
catheter ablation may be chosen. Catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation is
relatively new and is still being studied.
In this procedure thin, flexible wires are inserted into a vein in
the groin and threaded up through the vein and into the heart. There is an
electrode at the tip of the wires. The electrode sends out radio waves that
create heat. This heat destroys the heart tissue that causes atrial
fibrillation or the heart tissue that keeps it happening.
Ablation procedures either try to cure atrial fibrillation (focal
ablation, circumferential ablation, and pulmonary vein ablation) or try to
control your symptoms (nodal ablation).
Ablation to cure atrial fibrillation
Focal and circumferential catheter ablation are used to try to
cure atrial fibrillation. Focal ablation, also known as targeted ablation, is
used to destroy the specific areas in the heart that are firing off abnormal
electrical impulses and causing atrial fibrillation. Circumferential ablation
is used to destroy the tissue that lets atrial fibrillation continue.
Sometimes, a doctor uses both focal and circumferential ablation.
Pulmonary vein ablation is also used to try to cure atrial
fibrillation. Sometimes, abnormal impulses come from inside a pulmonary vein
and cause atrial fibrillation. (The pulmonary veins bring blood back from the
lungs to the heart.) Catheter ablation in a pulmonary vein can block these
impulses and keep atrial fibrillation from happening.
A pacemaker is usually not needed when catheter ablation is done
on the pulmonary vein or other targeted tissue.
View a
slideshow
of pulmonary vein or focal ablation
to see how the heart's electrical
system works, how atrial fibrillation happens, and how pulmonary vein or focal
ablation is performed.
In some cases, catheter ablation may be done by applying
radiofrequency energy to the outside or inside surface of the heart during
open-heart surgery. This may be an option if you are already having heart
surgery for another reason, such as
coronary artery bypass or valve replacement
surgery.
Ablation to control symptoms of atrial fibrillation
Nodal catheter ablation, also known as AV node ablation, can
control symptoms of atrial fibrillation when the cause cannot be stopped. You
may need AV node ablation if targeted or pulmonary vein ablation did not stop
your atrial fibrillation, or if these procedures will not help you. With AV
node ablation, the entire
atrioventricular (AV) node is destroyed. After the AV
node is destroyed, it can no longer send impulses to the lower chambers of the
heart (ventricles). This controls atrial fibrillation symptoms.
After AV node ablation, a permanent
pacemaker is needed to regulate your heart rhythm.
Nodal ablation can control your heart rate and reduce your symptoms, but it
does not prevent or cure atrial fibrillation. So you will probably need to take
anticoagulation therapy such as warfarin.
View a
slideshow
of AV node ablation
to see how the heart's electrical system works, how
atrial fibrillation happens, and how AV node ablation is performed.
You will be given medication to help you relax. A
local anesthetic will numb the site where the catheter
is inserted. The procedure is done in a hospital where you can be monitored
carefully.
What To Expect After Treatment
Recovery from catheter ablation is usually quick. You may be
hospitalized for 1 to 2 days so that your doctor can monitor your heart rate.
After the procedure, you will need to take anticoagulation medication, such as
warfarin (Coumadin, for example) for at least 3 months.
You might feel a flutter in your heart after the ablation
procedure. The flutter usually goes away after your heart heals. If your
flutter does not go away, you may need a second ablation procedure.
Why It Is Done
Focal ablation or pulmonary vein ablation that targets tissues that
generate irregular electrical impulses is often used for
paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in people who have
severe symptoms and who have not been helped by medicines.
AV node, or nodal, catheter ablation is occasionally used when
persistent chronic atrial fibrillation does not respond to treatment with
medicines and symptoms continue to be bothersome. It is most often used in
people who have difficult-to-control heart rates.
How Well It Works
Catheter ablation to cure atrial fibrillation (focal or pulmonary
vein ablation, for example) is more successful in people with paroxysmal atrial
fibrillation than in those with persistent atrial fibrillation.
In a pulmonary vein ablation study, 74% of patients who had
long-term atrial fibrillation with symptoms were free of atrial fibrillation
for at least one year after undergoing 1 or 2 ablation procedures.1
AV node ablation followed by pacemaker implantation reduces cardiac
symptoms and improves exercise tolerance, quality of life, and the amount of
blood pumped with each heartbeat (ejection fraction).2
Risks
Catheter ablation to cure atrial fibrillation is an invasive
procedure and has some serious risks. These risks include:
- Stroke. A stroke is a sudden disruption
in blood flow to a portion of the brain. The disruption in blood flow is caused
by a blockage or by bleeding of a blood vessel.
- Heart attack.
- Puncture of the
heart.
- Need for emergency heart surgery.
- Damage to the
pulmonary vein.
- Pulmonary vein stenosis, which is a narrowing of
the pulmonary vein.
- Phrenic nerve injury, which can cause paralysis
of the
diaphragm. The diaphragm is a large muscle that
separates the chest cavity (containing the lungs and heart) from the abdominal
cavity. It helps draw air in and out of the lungs.
- Pericarditis. Pericarditis is inflammation of the sac
(pericardium) that surrounds and protects the heart.
- Cardiac tamponade. This is an emergency condition that
can lead to death. It may require emergency heart
surgery.
- Atrio-esophageal fistula. In this life-threatening
condition, a hole forms between the heart's upper chamber and the esophagus.
- Bleeding from the puncture site where the wires are
inserted.
- New abnormal heart rhythms (arrhythmias).
- Sudden death.
The risks of catheter ablation of the AV node include:
- Bruising.
- A leaking blood
vessel.
- Stroke.
- Puncture of the
heart.
- Arrhythmias.
- Sudden death.2
What To Think About
A
pacemaker will be implanted to maintain normal heart
rhythm after AV node ablation.
After AV node ablation, you will need to take anticoagulant
medications because you will still be at risk for
stroke.
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