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    Heart Rhythm. 2011 Nov;8(11):1705-11. doi: 10.1016/j.hrthm.2011.06.030. Epub 2011 Jul 2.

    Postablation asymptomatic cerebral lesions: long-term follow-up using magnetic resonance imaging.

    Source

    Department of Electrophysiology, Academic Heart Center Cologne-Porz, Cologne, Germany. thomas.deneke@rub.de

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    Catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation (AF) is complicated by cerebral emboli resulting in acute ischemia. Recently, cerebral ischemic microlesions have been identified with diffusion-weighted magnet resonance imaging (MRI).

    OBJECTIVE:

    The clinical course and longer-term characteristics of these lesions are not known and were investigated in this study.

    METHODS:

    Of 86 patients, 33 (38%) had new asymptomatic cerebral lesions documented on MRI after catheter ablation for AF; 14 of these 33 (42%) underwent repeat MRI at different time intervals (2 weeks to 1 year) during follow-up, and clinical symptoms as well as size and number of residual lesions were documented.

    RESULTS:

    In postablation cerebral MRI, 50 new lesions were identified (3.6 lesions/patient) in 14 patients. No patient presented any neurological symptoms. Distribution of the lesions was predominantly in the left hemisphere (60%) and the cerebellum (26%); 52% of the lesions were small (≤3 mm maximum diameter), 42% were medium (4 to 10 mm) and 3 lesions (6%) had a maximum diameter >10 mm. Follow-up MRI after a median of 3 months revealed 3 residual lesions in 3 of 14 patients corresponding to the large acute postablation lesions (>10 mm). The remaining 47 of 50 (94%) of the small or medium-sized lesions were not detectable at follow-up evaluation.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Most asymptomatic cerebral lesions observed acutely after AF ablation procedures were ≤10 mm in diameter. 94% of all lesions healed without scarring at follow-up >2 weeks after ablation. The larger acute lesions produced chronic glial scars. Neither chronic nor acute lesions were associated with neurological symptoms.

    Copyright © 2011 Heart Rhythm Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Comment in

    PMID:
    21726519
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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