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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Termination of Atrial Fibrillation With Epicardial Cooling in the Oblique Sinus.

Journal:
JACC. Clinical electrophysiology
Year:
2018
Authors:
Witt, Chance M et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Cardiovascular Medicine
Species:
dog

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to determine if epicardial cooling could repeatedly terminate induced atrial fibrillation (AF) in a canine heart. BACKGROUND: Rapid termination of AF could control symptoms and prevent atrial remodeling; however, defibrillation by internal electrical cardioversion is not tolerable to most patients. Cooling of the epicardium slows atrial conduction and may provide a less painful method to quickly terminate AF. METHODS: AF was induced with atrial myocardial epinephrine injections and rapid atrial pacing in an open-chest canine. Attempts at termination were performed with a small metal device that was either cooled to 5&#xb0;C or kept at body temperature (control module). The device was placed on the epicardial surface in the oblique sinus. The time from device contact to termination of AF was recorded. RESULTS: In 5 different canine studies, there were 57 attempts at AF termination with either a 5&#xb0;C module (34 attempts) or a control module (23 attempts). The median (interquartile range [IQR]) time to AF termination was 24 s (IQR: 15 to 35 s) for the 5&#xb0;C therapy and 100 s (IQR: 47 to 240 s) for the body temperature treatments (p&#xa0;< 0.001). In the control group, there were 8 AF episodes that continued up to 4 min. Subsequent application of the 5&#xb0;C cooling module terminated AF in all cases. CONCLUSIONS: Epicardial cooling in the oblique sinus is effective for repeated termination of AF in a canine heart. If reproduced in human studies, epicardial cooling with an implantable device may provide a method for management of patients with AF.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30336883/