Some Surgical Aspects of Atrial Fibrillation Vincent A. Gaudiani, MD Luis J. Castro, MD Audrey L....
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Transcript of Some Surgical Aspects of Atrial Fibrillation Vincent A. Gaudiani, MD Luis J. Castro, MD Audrey L....
![Page 1: Some Surgical Aspects of Atrial Fibrillation Vincent A. Gaudiani, MD Luis J. Castro, MD Audrey L. Fisher, MPH.](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022062219/5516c6a9550346fc4e8b45b2/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Some Surgical Aspectsof Atrial Fibrillation
Vincent A. Gaudiani, MD
Luis J. Castro, MD
Audrey L. Fisher, MPH
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The Nature of Surgical Intervention
Demands a Simplified Model of What May Be a Complex Problem
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Conceptual strip of atrium with normal depolarization
Initial impulse
Impulse travels
Impulse completes circuit while tissue is still depolarized
Tissue repolarizes – ready for next impulse
Yellow tissue is repolarized and ready to conduct.Green tissue is depolarized and cannot currently conduct.
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Each macro-reentrant pathway must have a conduction time sufficiently long to permit initially depolarized muscle to repolarize before the depolarizing wavefront returns. This will depend on the:
• Physical length of the pathway• Conductance of the pathway
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Macro-reentrant pathways
Normal Abnormally Long
Abnormally Slow
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Macro-reentrant pathways
N
Normal Long Slow
Initial impulse
Impulse travels: farther in long circuit and at slwoer speed in slow circuit. Both of these circuits allow for tissue to repolarize by the
time the impulse completes the circuit.
Circuit complete: normal circuit tissue is still depolarized and unable to conduct again. The time delay in long and slow
circuits creates tissue that is repolarized by the time the circuit is complete, and the
impulse can be conducted again and again.
N
Normal SlowLong
N
Normal Long Slow
Yellow tissue is repolarized and ready to conduct.Green tissue is depolarized and cannot currently conduct.
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Cox and his colleagues demonstrated that atrial fibrillation may be seen as the
result of the interaction of a finite number of macro-reentrant pathways
ANDthat each pathway correlated with an
anatomic feature of the atria.
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Cox reasoned that surgical interdiction of each of these pathways would preclude
sustained atrial fibrillation.
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The likely Anatomic Pathways are around the right atrium:
Venae Cavae
Atrial Septum
Tricuspid Valve
Right Atrial Appendage
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The likely Anatomic Pathways are around the left atrium:
Pulmonary Veins
Mitral Valve
Atrial Septum
Left Atrial Appendage
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Surprisingly, other research has shown that atrial fibrillation is frequently initiated within the cuff of tissue
comprised by the pulmonary veins and the local atrial tissue around them.
- Perhaps 70-80% of atrial fibrillation can be prevented solely by isolating this
tissue from the rest of the atrium.
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Optimum Therapy of AF demands:
• Ablation of AF• Restoration of AV Synchrony• Restoration of AV Transport
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Optimum therapy corrects the clinical problems associated with AF:
• Atrial thrombus formation
• Decreased cardiac efficiency
• Palpitations
• Need for anticoagulation
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Surgical incisions in the right atrium
• Excise right atrial appendage
• Extend from right atrial appendage totricuspid valve
• SVC to IVC straight line incision
• Extend from caval incision to tricuspid
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Surgical incisions in the left atrium
Excise left atrial appendageExtend from appendage to epvExtend from mitral annulus to epvCut atrial septum through fossa
ovalis
Left atriotomy
Encircle pulmonary veins
(epv)
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The Cox/Maze III operation restores AV synchrony and transport in > 70-80% of patients by isolating the pulmonary vein
cuff and placing surgical incisions through each of the major macro-reentrant circuits.
Every segment of the atria, except the pulmonary vein cuff, remains in electrical
contact with the SA node.
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Maze Results I
From October 1997 through December 2003 we performed 162 Maze operations as follows:
•Maze Only 11
•Maze and Mitral Valve Only 74
•Maze and Any Other 77
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Maze Results II
In the entire series of 162 cases, there were three operative mortalities (1.9%). These occurred in high-risk patients. There have not been any deaths in reasonable or low risk patients.
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Maze Results IIIWe follow up with our Maze patients on an annual basis. Our follow up of August 2003 included 133 patients from between three months to over five years out from the time of operation. The percentage of patients in normal rhythm at 2003 follow up was:
•Maze Only 91% (10/11)•Maze and Mitral Valve Only 92% (55/60)•Maze and Any Other 89% (55/62)
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Conclusion
The Cox/Maze procedure is an effective treatment for atrial fibrillation
for some patients who require cardiac operations.