Hospital Services
Cardiac Electrophysiology Procedures
(Diagnose and/or Treatment of Heart Rhythm Disorders)
Catheter Ablation
Normally, electricity flows throughout
the heart in a regular, measured pattern. This normally operating
electrical system is the basis for heart muscle contractions.
Sometimes, the electrical flow gets blocked or travels
the same pathways repeatedly creating something of a "short circuit"
that disturbs normal heart rhythms. Medicine often helps. In some
cases, however, the most effective treatment is to destroy the tissue
housing the short circuit. This procedure is called cardiac ablation.
Cardiac ablation is just one of a number of terms
used to describe the non-surgical procedure. Other common terms
are: cardiac catheter ablation, radiofrequency ablation, cardiac
ablation, or simply ablation.
The ablation process
Like many cardiac procedures, ablation no longer requires a full
frontal chest opening. Rather, ablation is a relatively non-invasive
procedure that involves inserting catheters - narrow, flexible wires
- into a blood vessel, often through a site in the groin or neck,
and winding the wire up into the heart. The journey from entry point
to heart muscle is navigated by images created by a fluoroscope,
an x-ray-like machine that provides continuous, "live" images of
the catheter and tissue.
Once the catheter reaches the heart, electrodes
at the tip of the catheter gather data and a variety of electrical
measurements are made. The data pinpoints the location of the faulty
electrical site. During this "electrical mapping," the cardiac arrhythmia
specialist, an electrophysiologist, may sedate the patient and instigate
some of the very arrhythmias that are the crux of the problem. The
events are safe, given the range of experts and resources close
at hand, and are necessary to ensure the precise location of the
problematic tissue.
Once the damaged site is confirmed, energy is used
to destroy a small amount of tissue, ending the disturbance of electrical
flow through the heart and restoring a healthy heart rhythm. This
energy may take the form of radiofrequency energy, which cauterizes
the tissue, or intense cold, which freezes, or cryoablates the tissue.
Other energy sources are being investigated.
Patients rarely report pain, more often describing
what they feel as discomfort. Some watch much of the procedure on
monitors and occasionally ask questions. After the procedure, a
patient remains still for four to six hours to ensure the entry
point incision begins to heal properly. Once mobile again, patients
may feel stiff and achy from lying still for hours.
When is ablation appropriate
Many people have abnormal heart rhythms (arrhythmias) that cannot
be controlled with lifestyle changes or medications. Some patients
cannot or do not wish to take life-long antiarrhythmic medications
and other drugs because of side effects that interfere with their
quality of life.
Most often, cardiac ablation is used to treat rapid
heartbeats that begin in the upper chambers, or atria, of the heart.
As a group, these are know as supraventricular tachycardias, or
SVTs. Types of SVTs are:
- Atrial Tachycardia
- Atrial Flutter
- Atrial Fibrillation
- Supraventricular Tachycardia
- Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome.
Less frequently, ablation can treat heart rhythm
disorders that begin in the heart's lower chambers, known as the
ventricles. The most common, ventricular tachycardia, may also be
the most dangerous type of arrhythmia because it can cause sudden
cardiac death.
For patients at risk for sudden cardiac death, ablation
often is used along with an implantable cardioverter device (ICD).
The ablation decreases the frequency of abnormal heart rhythms in
the ventricles and therefore reduces the number of ICD shocks a
patient may experience.
For many types of arrhythmias, catheter ablation
is successful in 90-98 percent of cases - thus eliminating the need
for long-term drug therapies.
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