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Subjects eligible for this study have an irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation (AF)and who are scheduled for a procedure that involves applying electrical energy in your pulmonary veins, which is usually the site where this abnormal rhythm begins, or pulmonary vein ablation
We will examine the size and function of the left atrium (one of the 4 chambers of your heart) and the pulmonary veins before and after your ablation. This will be done by getting extra measurements during tests you will be having done which are ICE (intra cardiac echocardiography), TEE (transesophageal echocardiography) and CT scan (computed tomography), and drawing some blood samples.
The purpose of getting these extra measurements and blood samples is:
During the clinically indicated tests the doctor has ordered (TEE, ICE, CT scan), there will be additional measurements taken as a part of this research. This means that the TEE exam will last an additional 10-15 minutes, and the ICE procedure will last an additional 5-10 minutes. There is no additional time needed for the CT scan. In addition, we will be drawing 20 cc of blood (approximately four teaspoons).
The regularly scheduled follow up visit is usually three months after your ablation, we will again be getting some extra measurements from the TEE and CT scan. This will add about 10-15 minutes to the TEE test, but no additional time will be needed for the CT scan. In addition, we will be drawing 10 cc of blood drawn (approximately two teaspoons). A ventilation-perfusion scan of the lungs will also be performed as part of standard clinical care if significant PV stenosis is found by CT and/or TEE.
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General Procedures Prior to ablation, blood will be drawn for measuring c-reactive protein, brain natriuretic polypeptide, D-dimer and prothrombin fragment 1.2. A transesopahegeal echocardiogram and an intracardiac echocardiogram will be performed. Then following sterile techniques, standard catheters will be passed through veins and positioned into the heart using X-ray guidance, and will cross the wall that divides the upper chambers of the heart so that the left atrium can be reached.The catheters will be used to trigger sites that originate the anomalous rhythm and once these are identified the generator will deliver radiofrequency energy to destroy the areas that cause irregular beats. After ablation follow-up visits will be done at one, three, six and twelve months. During that time several tests such as electrocardiograms, 24 hour Holter recording, computed tomography of the heart, transesophageal echocardiogram and repeated blood drawing to measure c-reactive protein, brain natriuretic peptide, D-dimer and prothrombin fragment 1.2 will be done.
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