Assess the impact of persistent/permanent atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation on endocrine and mechanical cardiac functions.In all, 43 patients (40 males, 53 +/- 12 years) undergoing persistent/permanent AF ablation had atrial (ANP) and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) measurements before day 1, 3, and 3 months after ablation. In the same period of time transthoracic echocardiography was performed. With a mean radiofrequency delivery of 98 +/- 29 min, sinus rhythm (SR) was restored in 30 patients (70%) without DC shock. ANP decreased significantly (P < 0.001) with restoration of SR and then increased until day 3 post ablation without reaching the level observed during AF. At 3 months, ANP was significantly lower than day 3 reaching normal value in 28 (65%) patients and being <7 pg/mL in 4 (9%). The BNP followed the same trend with normal BNP level in 23 (53%) patients at 3 months. Identifiable atrial filling waves on the pulsed Doppler transmitral recordings performed between day 2 and day 4 after the procedure were seen in 18 patients (42%). At 3 months, 39 (95%) of the patients with SR during echocardiography had a significant A wave.SR following persistent/permanent AF ablation is associated with a dramatic decrease in natriuretic peptides. At 3 months, despite relatively extensive atrial ablation, endocrine and mechanical cardiac functions are significantly improved.
Erythropoietin (EPO) is the principal haematopoietic growth factor of the red blood cell line. Its major role is to stimulate the red blood cell production. EPO synthesis by peritubular cells in the kidney is regulated by oxygen concentration and must lead adaptation of the organism to face many different physiological situations. An imbalance can lead either to anaemia or polycythemia. Synthetic EPO, so-called recombinant, has definitively changed the treatment in the anaemia of chronic renal failure and regularly find new indications, legal (anaemia of cancer, anaemia of chronic inflammatory syndromes, myelodysplastic syndromes, neurology, cardiology...) or illegal (doping substance in sport). This article reviews the physiology, the role and the indications of EPO in clinical routine practice and define why and how EPO should be measured. We also focus on the analytical requirements for serum EPO concentration determination, especially in the differential diagnosis of polycythemias (secondary polycythemia/Polycythemia Vera).