Ablation Effect Indicated by Impedance Fall is Correlated with Contact Force Level During Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation

作者:De Bortoli Alessandro; Sun Li Zhi; Solheim Eivind; Hoff Per Ivar; Schuster Peter; Ohm Ole Jorgen; Chen Jian*
来源:Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology, 2013, 24(11): 1210-1215.
DOI:10.1111/jce.12215

摘要

Contact Force Correlates with Impedance Fall During Ablation %26lt;br%26gt;IntroductionPrevious studies have validated the use of impedance fall as a measure of the effects of ablation. We investigated whether catheter-to-tissue contact force correlated with impedance fall during atrial fibrillation ablation. %26lt;br%26gt;Methods and ResultsA total of 394 ablation points from 35 patients who underwent atrial fibrillation ablation were selected and analyzed in terms of the presence of stable catheter contact in non-ablated areas in the left atrium. A fixed power output (30 W) was applied for 60 seconds. Contact force, impedance fall, and force-direction angle were retrieved and exported for off-line analysis. Qualified points were divided into 5 groups according to the level of contact force (1-5 g, 6-10 g, 11-15 g, 16-20 g, and %26gt;20 g). An acute impedance fall was observed in the first 10 seconds followed by a plateau in group I and by a further fall in the other groups. Group V showed a rise in impedance during the last 20 seconds of ablation. Levels of impedance fall at each time point were significantly different among all the groups (P%26lt;0.001) except between groups III and IV. There was a significant correlation between contact force and maximum impedance fall (rho = 0.54, P%26lt;0.01). Lesions with a force-direction angle of 0-30 degrees had significantly lower contact force and maximum impedance fall than those with angles of 30-60 degrees and 60-135 degrees (P%26lt;0.01). %26lt;br%26gt;ConclusionsUnder stable catheter conditions, contact force correlates with impedance fall during 60 seconds of ablation. Contact force exceeding 5 g produces greater impedance fall, which probably indicates adequate lesion formation. A contact force greater than 20 g may lead to late tissue overheating.

  • 出版日期2013-11