Subxiphoid surgical approach for epicardial catheter-based mapping and ablation in patients with prior cardiac surgery or difficult pericardial access
Percutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible when pericardial adhesions are present, such as from prior cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of direct surgical exp...
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Published in: | Circulation (New York, N.Y.) Vol. 110; no. 10; pp. 1197 - 1201 |
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Abstract | Percutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible when pericardial adhesions are present, such as from prior cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of direct surgical exposure of the pericardial space to allow catheter epicardial mapping and ablation in the electrophysiology laboratory when percutaneous access is not feasible.
In 6 patients with prior cardiac surgery or failed percutaneous pericardial access, a subxiphoid pericardial window was attempted. In all 6 patients, manual lysis of adhesions exposed the epicardial surface of the heart through a small subxiphoid incision and allowed placement of an 8F sheath into the pericardial space under direct vision. Access to the diaphragmatic surface of the heart with ablation catheters was achieved in all patients, and catheter manipulation to the lateral and anterior walls was possible in 4 patients. Three-dimensional electroanatomic voltage maps revealed low-amplitude regions in the inferior or posterior left ventricular epicardium. A total of 16 ventricular tachycardias were induced, and 14 were abolished by radiofrequency ablation. Ablation was limited by intrapericardial defibrillator patches adherent to the likely target region in 2 patients. All patients had chest pain consistent with pericarditis early after the procedure that resolved within a few days. There were no other complications.
A direct surgical subxiphoid epicardial approach in the electrophysiology laboratory is feasible for patients with difficult pericardial access who require ablation of epicardial arrhythmia foci. |
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AbstractList | Background—
Percutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible when pericardial adhesions are present, such as from prior cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of direct surgical exposure of the pericardial space to allow catheter epicardial mapping and ablation in the electrophysiology laboratory when percutaneous access is not feasible.
Methods and Results—
In 6 patients with prior cardiac surgery or failed percutaneous pericardial access, a subxiphoid pericardial window was attempted. In all 6 patients, manual lysis of adhesions exposed the epicardial surface of the heart through a small subxiphoid incision and allowed placement of an 8F sheath into the pericardial space under direct vision. Access to the diaphragmatic surface of the heart with ablation catheters was achieved in all patients, and catheter manipulation to the lateral and anterior walls was possible in 4 patients. Three-dimensional electroanatomic voltage maps revealed low-amplitude regions in the inferior or posterior left ventricular epicardium. A total of 16 ventricular tachycardias were induced, and 14 were abolished by radiofrequency ablation. Ablation was limited by intrapericardial defibrillator patches adherent to the likely target region in 2 patients. All patients had chest pain consistent with pericarditis early after the procedure that resolved within a few days. There were no other complications.
Conclusions—
A direct surgical subxiphoid epicardial approach in the electrophysiology laboratory is feasible for patients with difficult pericardial access who require ablation of epicardial arrhythmia foci. Percutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible when pericardial adhesions are present, such as from prior cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of direct surgical exposure of the pericardial space to allow catheter epicardial mapping and ablation in the electrophysiology laboratory when percutaneous access is not feasible. In 6 patients with prior cardiac surgery or failed percutaneous pericardial access, a subxiphoid pericardial window was attempted. In all 6 patients, manual lysis of adhesions exposed the epicardial surface of the heart through a small subxiphoid incision and allowed placement of an 8F sheath into the pericardial space under direct vision. Access to the diaphragmatic surface of the heart with ablation catheters was achieved in all patients, and catheter manipulation to the lateral and anterior walls was possible in 4 patients. Three-dimensional electroanatomic voltage maps revealed low-amplitude regions in the inferior or posterior left ventricular epicardium. A total of 16 ventricular tachycardias were induced, and 14 were abolished by radiofrequency ablation. Ablation was limited by intrapericardial defibrillator patches adherent to the likely target region in 2 patients. All patients had chest pain consistent with pericarditis early after the procedure that resolved within a few days. There were no other complications. A direct surgical subxiphoid epicardial approach in the electrophysiology laboratory is feasible for patients with difficult pericardial access who require ablation of epicardial arrhythmia foci. BACKGROUNDPercutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible when pericardial adhesions are present, such as from prior cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of direct surgical exposure of the pericardial space to allow catheter epicardial mapping and ablation in the electrophysiology laboratory when percutaneous access is not feasible.METHODS AND RESULTSIn 6 patients with prior cardiac surgery or failed percutaneous pericardial access, a subxiphoid pericardial window was attempted. In all 6 patients, manual lysis of adhesions exposed the epicardial surface of the heart through a small subxiphoid incision and allowed placement of an 8F sheath into the pericardial space under direct vision. Access to the diaphragmatic surface of the heart with ablation catheters was achieved in all patients, and catheter manipulation to the lateral and anterior walls was possible in 4 patients. Three-dimensional electroanatomic voltage maps revealed low-amplitude regions in the inferior or posterior left ventricular epicardium. A total of 16 ventricular tachycardias were induced, and 14 were abolished by radiofrequency ablation. Ablation was limited by intrapericardial defibrillator patches adherent to the likely target region in 2 patients. All patients had chest pain consistent with pericarditis early after the procedure that resolved within a few days. There were no other complications.CONCLUSIONSA direct surgical subxiphoid epicardial approach in the electrophysiology laboratory is feasible for patients with difficult pericardial access who require ablation of epicardial arrhythmia foci. |
Author | Epstein, Laurence M Sapp, John L Cooper, Joshua M Stevenson, William G Couper, Gregory Soejima, Kyoko |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Kyoko surname: Soejima fullname: Soejima, Kyoko email: ksoejima@bics.bwh.harvard.edu organization: Cardiovascular Division, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115, USA. ksoejima@bics.bwh.harvard.edu – sequence: 2 givenname: Gregory surname: Couper fullname: Couper, Gregory – sequence: 3 givenname: Joshua M surname: Cooper fullname: Cooper, Joshua M – sequence: 4 givenname: John L surname: Sapp fullname: Sapp, John L – sequence: 5 givenname: Laurence M surname: Epstein fullname: Epstein, Laurence M – sequence: 6 givenname: William G surname: Stevenson fullname: Stevenson, William G |
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Snippet | Percutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible when... Background— Percutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible... BACKGROUNDPercutaneous epicardial mapping and ablation are successful in some patients with ventricular epicardial reentry circuits but may be impossible when... |
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SubjectTerms | Adult Aged Cardiomyopathies - complications Catheter Ablation - adverse effects Catheter Ablation - methods Coronary Disease - complications Electrophysiologic Techniques, Cardiac - methods Feasibility Studies Female Humans Male Middle Aged Pain, Postoperative - etiology Pericarditis - etiology Pericardium - physiopathology Pericardium - surgery Reoperation Tachycardia, Ventricular - etiology Tachycardia, Ventricular - physiopathology Tachycardia, Ventricular - surgery Tissue Adhesions - surgery Xiphoid Bone |
Title | Subxiphoid surgical approach for epicardial catheter-based mapping and ablation in patients with prior cardiac surgery or difficult pericardial access |
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