Affiliation:
1. Medtronic Minneapolis Minnesota USA
2. McGill University Health Center McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada
3. Department of Cardiology, Inselspital—University Hospital Bern University of Bern Bern Switzerland
4. Department of Electrophysiology Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig Leipzig Germany
5. Faculty of Electrical Engineering University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia
Abstract
AbstractIntroductionContact force has been used to titrate lesion formation for radiofrequency ablation. Pulsed field ablation (PFA) is a field‐based ablation technology for which limited evidence on the impact of contact force on lesion size is available.MethodsPorcine hearts (n = 6) were perfused using a modified Langendorff set‐up. A prototype focal PFA catheter attached to a force gauge was held perpendicular to the epicardium and lowered until contact was made. Contact force was recorded during each PFA delivery. Matured lesions were cross‐sectioned, stained, and the lesion dimensions measured.ResultsA total of 82 lesions were evaluated with contact forces between 1.3 and 48.6 g. Mean lesion depth was 4.8 ± 0.9 mm (standard deviation), mean lesion width was 9.1 ± 1.3 mm, and mean lesion volume was 217.0 ± 96.6 mm3. Linear regression curves showed an increase of only 0.01 mm in depth (depth = 0.01 × contact force + 4.41, R2 = 0.05), 0.03 mm in width (width = 0.03 × contact force + 8.26, R2 = 0.13) for each additional gram of contact force, and 2.20 mm3 in volume (volume = 2.20 × contact force + 162, R2 = 0.10).ConclusionIncreasing contact force using a bipolar, biphasic focal PFA system has minimal effects on acute lesion dimensions in an isolated porcine heart model and achieving tissue contact is more important than the force with which that contact is made.
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
27 articles.
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