ABLATION for ATRIAL FIBRILLATION: Watch a live procedure!
Atrial fibrillation (AFIB) is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia encountered in clinical practice. The burden of AFIB as well as awareness of this condition has increased dramatically in recent years. AFIB can be effectively treated with a procedure known as catheter ablation. This procedure is usually performed under general anesthesia – meaning the first thing the patient knows is that the procedure is over! Patients usually spend one night over night in hospital and go home on the day following the procedure.
While the patient is asleep, catheters are advanced through the large veins to the heart, arriving in the right atrium (RA). The majority of AFIB arises from the left atrium (LA). To access the LA, transseptal puncture must be performed, so catheter can be advanced across the very thin wall separating the RA from LA. Within the LA, the priority is then to perform pulmonary vein isolation (PVI). The PVs can produces bursts of abnormal electrical activity, inducing episodes of AFIB. Catheter ablation is therefore performed around each of the four PVs, to achieve electrical isolation from the remainder of the LA. Durable PVI is the backbone of all ablation procedures for AFIB.
When the pattern of AFIB is paroxysmal (short episodes of AFIB that come and go), only PVI is performed. When the pattern of AFIB becomes persistent (episodes Lasting weeks to months), additional ablation targets may be addressed in addition to PVI. Tremendous progress in catheter technology and the evolution of electroanatomic mapping systems have made AFIB ablations far more safe and successful. In this video, we are using the CARTO mapping systems and catheters from Biosense Webster.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Atrial Fibrillation For Patients & Families - Full Presentation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipx_aamkRlo
Patient-specific ablation for atrial fibrillation using rotors, CFAEs, pulmonary veins, and lines:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBqXdaXsmHY
Видео ABLATION for ATRIAL FIBRILLATION: Watch a live procedure! канала JamesKnellerMD
While the patient is asleep, catheters are advanced through the large veins to the heart, arriving in the right atrium (RA). The majority of AFIB arises from the left atrium (LA). To access the LA, transseptal puncture must be performed, so catheter can be advanced across the very thin wall separating the RA from LA. Within the LA, the priority is then to perform pulmonary vein isolation (PVI). The PVs can produces bursts of abnormal electrical activity, inducing episodes of AFIB. Catheter ablation is therefore performed around each of the four PVs, to achieve electrical isolation from the remainder of the LA. Durable PVI is the backbone of all ablation procedures for AFIB.
When the pattern of AFIB is paroxysmal (short episodes of AFIB that come and go), only PVI is performed. When the pattern of AFIB becomes persistent (episodes Lasting weeks to months), additional ablation targets may be addressed in addition to PVI. Tremendous progress in catheter technology and the evolution of electroanatomic mapping systems have made AFIB ablations far more safe and successful. In this video, we are using the CARTO mapping systems and catheters from Biosense Webster.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Atrial Fibrillation For Patients & Families - Full Presentation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipx_aamkRlo
Patient-specific ablation for atrial fibrillation using rotors, CFAEs, pulmonary veins, and lines:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBqXdaXsmHY
Видео ABLATION for ATRIAL FIBRILLATION: Watch a live procedure! канала JamesKnellerMD
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