P ulmonary vein (PV) isolation is an effective therapy to alleviate symptoms and restore sinus rhythm in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF).1 However, recent reports have shown that ablation in the left atrium (LA) is associated with new asymptomatic cerebral emboli (ACE) visible on postprocedural diffusion-weighted cerebral MRI.2 The largest such study reported an ACE incidence of 14.2% using openirrigation radiofrequency (RF) catheters.3 Although no patient parameters were correlated with ACE, procedural parameters, such as cardioversion and activated clotting time (ACT) level, were associated with new silent lesions. Smaller subsequent reports with rates ranging from 7% to 12% have similarly implicated procedural factors to increasing ACE incidence, including concomitant diagnostic coronary angiography, 4 total RF duration, 5 and non-PV ablation.6
Editorial see p 827 Clinical Perspective on p 842Two nonrandomized studies found that use of multielectrode RF (MER) ablation was associated with elevated ACE incidence compared with irrigated RF and cryoablation, with a rate as high as 38%. 7,8 Subsequent animal studies showed that both gaseous and solid emboli were generated during both irrigated and MER ablation in the swine LA. 9 Specifically with the circular MER catheter, increased gas emboli were observed during catheter insertion into transseptal sheaths while both embolic and gaseous © 2013 American Heart Association, Inc. Original Article
Circ Arrhythm ElectrophysiolBackground-This prospective, multicenter study sought to evaluate the incidence of asymptomatic cerebral emboli (ACE) during ablation of atrial fibrillation (AF) using a multielectrode radiofrequency (MER) system when specific procedural changes were applied. Methods and Results-Sixty subjects (age 60±10 years; 87% paroxysmal; CHADS 2 score, 0.6±0.7) undergoing AF ablation with a circular MER catheter were studied. Three procedural changes were specified: (1) ablation was performed under therapeutic vitamin K antagonist and heparin to maintain activated clotting time >350 seconds; (2) submerged loading of the catheter into the introducer before sheath insertion to minimize air ingress; and (3) either the distal or proximal electrode of the circular MER catheter was deactivated to prevent inadvertent bipolar radiofrequency interaction. MRI was performed <7 days preablation and 2 days postablation. Subjects with new cerebral findings after ablation underwent repeat MRI after 1 month. An acute ACE lesion was defined by a new hyperintensity on diffusion-weighted and fluidattenuated inversion recovery cerebral MRI sequences. Neurological function was evaluated at baseline, postablation, and 1 month. All target pulmonary veins were isolated. In 60% (36/60) of patients, pre-existing cerebral lesions were seen on the preprocedure MRI (8 lesions per subject; interquartile range, 3-22). New postprocedural ACE occurred in only 1/60 patients (incidence, 1.7%; 95% confidence interval, 0.04-8.9), which was no longer visible on MRI after 1 month. Conclusi...