Aims: In patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) and uncontrolled ventricular rate, radiofrequency (RF) ablation of the atrioventricular (AV) node and pacemaker (PM) implantation (ablate and pace) is a valid therapeutic approach, especially in elderly patients. The aim of our study was to evaluate the PM dependence and the incidence of correlated clinical phenomena in a patients population with AV block induced by RF ablation of the AV junction.
Methods and results: One-hundred and sixty-three patients (71 men; mean age 71 +/- 8 years) who had undergone ablate and pace therapy were evaluated. The patients underwent assessment of quality of life, impairment of consciousness, stroke/transient ischaemic attack (TIA), hospitalizations for heart failure, episodes of palpitations, and instrumental evaluation of PM dependence during PM inhibition (absence of escape rhythm; asystolic pause >5 s; escape rhythm <30 bpm after rhythm stabilization). Correlation between instrumentally evaluated PM dependence and clinical history was analysed. Hundred and thirty-two patients were evaluated after a mean follow-up period of 36 months [31 subjects (19%) died before the evaluation]; 55 patients (42%) were classified as PM-dependent: 38 (69%) complained of disturbances (19 dizziness, 15 pre-syncope, 4 syncope); 77 patients (58%) were considered non-PM-dependent: symptoms (dizziness, flush) were reported by only 3 (4%). No significant differences emerged between PM-dependent and non-PM-dependent patients with regard to episodes of pre-syncope, syncope, stroke/TIA, hospitalizations for heart failure, and quality of life.
Conclusion: This study confirms that ablate and pace is an effective and safe approach in subjects with chronic or recurrent AF and uncontrolled ventricular rate.