Atrial Fibrillation Therapies: Lest We Forget Surgery

作者:Toeg Hadi Daood; Al Atassi Talal; Lam Buu Khanh*
来源:Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 2014, 30(6): 590-597.
DOI:10.1016/j.cjca.2014.02.001

摘要

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a disease that causes a significant burden in a patient's life. It is a known risk factor for heart failure, stroke, and premature death. The classic therapeutic strategies include rate control, rhythm control, and prevention of stroke. Pharmacological rhythm control with antiarrhythmic drugs can only be achieved 50% of the time while simultaneously subjecting patients to deleterious adverse reactions. With recent advances in catheter ablation procedures, rhythm control can be safely attained anywhere from 57%-80% of the time, depending on the number of repeat catheter ablation procedures that are performed and concomitant use of antiarrhythmic drugs. The Cox-Maze procedure is a technically challenging cut-and-sew atrial lesion set with associated morbidity, yet is still considered the gold standard for rhythm control. Fortunately, this procedure has been modified in efforts to improve the safety profile (shorter cross clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass time), to simplify lesion set creation with newer energy sources, and to perform this operation in a minimally invasive setting. Minimally invasive surgical AF ablation techniques have excellent safety profiles and can achieve rhythm control in up to 90% of patients. In contrast, patients undergoing open heart surgery can undergo either concomitant endocardial or epicardial AF ablation procedures without jeopardizing the surgery along with success rates from 60% to 88%. Thus, there has been an increase in current surgical options for treating AF because of novel approaches and energy sources which yield effective long-term results in patient care and minimize perioperative complications and thereby optimize the risk/benefit ratio profile.

  • 出版日期2014-6