How an innovative catheter with temperature control and very high-power, short-duration ablation changed our approach to the treatment of persistent atrial fibrillation

Eur Heart J Suppl. 2023 Apr 26;25(Suppl C):C258-C260. doi: 10.1093/eurheartjsupp/suad050. eCollection 2023 May.

Abstract

Ablation targets of persistent atrial fibrillation remain poorly understood nowadays: due to structural alterations of the left atrium, isolation of the pulmonary veins alone has proved ineffective. New ablation targets such as the posterior wall, coronary sinus, and left atrial appendage were then sought. A new catheter (QDOT Micro™) has recently been released, which has the potential to increase the safety and efficacy of the procedure: it is connected to a new radiofrequency generator that allows for temperature-controlled ablation by reducing power and increasing irrigation with the increase in tissue temperature and allows to deliver power up to 90 W for few seconds (very high-power short-duration).

Keywords: Left atrial posterior wall ablation; Microbipolar mapping; Persistent atrial fibrillation; Very high-power short-duration ablation.