Resting and Exercise-Induced Left Atrial Hypertension in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation: The Causes and Implications for Catheter Ablation
2017
Abstract Objectives The aim of this paper was to investigate the prevalence of resting and exercise-induced left atrial hypertension (LAH) in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (AF), association of the LAH with other cardiac abnormalities, and its implications for AF catheter ablation. Background The clinical role of LAH in patients with established AF is largely unknown. Methods Patients scheduled for catheter ablation of AF (n = 240; age 60 ± 10 years; 67% men, 62% paroxysmal AF) underwent detailed echocardiography, assessment of quality of life (QoL), left atrial (LA) voltage mapping, and measurement of the LA pressure at rest and during isometric handgrip exercise. After ablation they were followed for AF recurrence for 16 ± 6 months. Results Resting and exercise-induced LAH (mean LA pressure >15 mm Hg) occurred in 15% and 34% of the patients, respectively. Both the patients with resting and exercise-induced LAH had typical features of latent heart failure with preserved ejection fraction associated with advanced LA structural and functional remodeling. AF recurred after ablation in 45% of the patients. LAH was an independent risk factor for arrhythmia recurrence (hazard ratio: 1.7, 95% confidence interval: 1.2 to 2.2). The patients with LAH had worse baseline QoL, but they benefited significantly more from a successful ablation than the patients without LAH. Conclusions Presence of either resting or exercise-induced LAH identified AF patients with a distinct clinical profile, extensive LA substrate, and different clinical response to catheter ablation. Stratification of AF patients based on the LA exercise hemodynamics could help in the future to tailor the ablation strategy.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
18
References
16
Citations
NaN
KQI