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Automated rhythm-based control of radiofrequency ablation close to the atrioventricular node: pre-clinical, animal and first-in-human testing.

Posted by susan.d 
[www.heartrhythmjournal.com]

Automated rhythm-based control of radiofrequency ablation close to the atrioventricular node: pre-clinical, animal and first-in-human testing.

Background

Risk of heart block during radiofrequency ablation of AVNRT and septal accessory pathways is minimized by rapidly ceasing ablation in response to markers of risk, such as atrio-ventricular dissociation, fast junctional rhythm, PR interval prolongation, or two consecutive atrial or ventricular depolarisations. Currently this is done manually.
Objective

To build and test a control system able to monitor cardiac rhythm and automatically terminate ablation energy when required.
Methods

The device was built from off-shelf componentry. Pre-clinical testing involved real-time input of EGM/ECG data from 209 ablations (20 patients) over slow (n=19) and fast (n=1) AV nodal pathways. Device response speed was compared to human response. The device’s ability to prevent heart block was tested in 5 sheep. First-in-human testing was then performed in 12 patients undergoing AVNRT ablation.
Results

Risk conditions necessitating shut-off of ablation (200 total; 111 pre-clinical, 89 first-in-human) were detected by the device with 100% sensitivity, and 94% specificity, automatically terminating ablation while still allowing successful ablation in all patients. Device shut-off of ablation was always faster than human response (median difference 1.24s). In each of five sheep, 40 consecutive attempts to cause heart block by ablating over the His bundle were unsuccessful due to automatic shut-off in response to rhythm change.
Conclusions

Automated shut-off of ablation close to the AV node in response to markers of risk for heart block is feasible with high accuracy, and faster response than human. The system may increase safety of ablation near the AV node by preventing heart block.




Tested in five sheep..long way to go but it looks promising.
It will only be applicable to people undergoing ablation for SVT, not afib.
I did a seach for SVT, but couldn't find any information.
Quote
colindo
I did a seach for SVT, but couldn't find any information.

Try supraventricular tachycardia. Or just lookup AVNRT, which is one of the SVTs and the one the article discusses. Ablating AVNRT requires ablating very close to the AV node, so that's why there's a risk of causing heart block.
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