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127


Electrogram Frequency Analysis and Isochronal Activation Surface Area Mapping for Ablation of Premature Ventricular Contractions

Hoffer-Hawlik, Michael A; Pradhan, Alyna; Rosinski, Elizabeth; Jankelson, Lior; Kushnir, Alexander; Garber, Leonid; Holmes, Douglas; Aizer, Anthony; Chinitz, Larry A; Barbhaiya, Chirag R
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:A lower frequency early electrogram (EGM) or broad area of early activation during premature ventricular contraction (PVC) mapping may be associated with a PVC origin in an opposing chamber or deep within the mapped surface. The utility of quantifying EGM frequency at early activation sites and isochronal activated surface area (IASA) is unclear. Our study aimed to investigate the utility of EGM frequency analysis and IASA mapping to complement activation mapping during PVC ablation. METHODS:High density PVC activation and IASA maps were created using a multi-electrode mapping catheter in 25 patients undergoing PVC ablation. EGMs in early activation regions were retrospectively studied. IASAs in each mapped chamber were analyzed. RESULTS:within 10 ms was unsuccessful. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Higher EGM frequency and smaller IASA were associated with successful ablation of PVCs. Ablation at sites with EGM frequency > 325 Hz was successful in all patients. The utility of identifying higher frequency EGMs at early activation sites requires further study.
PMID: 41755355
ISSN: 1540-8167
CID: 6010472

Pulsed field ablation and periprocedural stroke risk - A step in the right direction [Editorial]

Hochstadt, Aviram; Barbhaiya, Chirag R; Jankelson, Lior; Levine, Joseph
PMID: 40749960
ISSN: 1556-3871
CID: 5903872

Left atrial wall thickness correlates with pulmonary vein reconnection following atrial fibrillation ablation

Kushnir, Alexander; Barbhaiya, Chirag R; Jankelson, Lior; Holmes, Douglas; Aizer, Anthony; Park, David; Bernstein, Scott; Spinelli, Michael A; Garber, Leonid; Yang, Felix; Rosinski, Elizabeth; Chinitz, Larry A
BACKGROUND:Pulmonary vein (PV) isolation is the cornerstone of radiofrequency (RF) ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) and PV reconnection is a common cause of recurrent AF. The relationship between PV ostial wall thickness (WT) and durable PV isolation is a matter of ongoing investigation. Additionally, the relationship between catheter impedance and WT is not well understood. We studied the relationship between PV ostial WT, ablation lesion metrics, and PV reconnection. METHODS:16 patients were identified who underwent an initial and redo AF ablation procedure and had a cardiac CTA analyzed using ADAS-3D imaging software performed prior to the initial ablation. Ablation lesion metrics from the initial ablation procedure were collected from the electroanatomic mapping software. Reconnected and isolated PV were identified based on electroanatomic mapping data collected at the redo AF ablation procedure. Patients with reconnected PV exhibited thicker left atrial walls (1.4 mm vs 1.2 mm, P < 0.05) and reconnected veins exhibited thicker ostial walls (1.7 mm, vs 1.5 mm, P < 0.05). LA volume, number of ablation lesions, and ablation lesion time were not significantly different between reconnected and isolated PV. Impedance drop during ablation was greater in patients with reconnected PV compared to patients with isolated PV (- 9.0 Ω vs - 6.6 Ω, P < 0.05). There was no correlation between PV ostial WT and ablation lesion impedance drop. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:PV reconnection was associated with thicker LA and PV ostial WT. Future studies will examine whether targeting thicker PV ostial tissue with more aggressive lesion metrics or different ablation technology can improve PV isolation and ablationoutcomes.
PMID: 40542289
ISSN: 1572-8595
CID: 5871412

Vein of Marshall Ethanol Ablation as a Strategy for Recurrent Persistent Atrial Fibrillation

Hsia, Brian C; Zhang, Peter; Junarta, Joey; Garber, Leonid; Yang, Felix; Spinelli, Michael; Malyshev, Yury; Kushnir, Alexander; Jankelson, Lior; Bernstein, Scott; Park, David; Barbhaiya, Chirag; Holmes, Douglas; Chinitz, Larry A; Aizer, Anthony
BACKGROUND:Vein of Marshall (VOM) ethanol ablation is effective in preventing recurrence in patients with persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) as a de novo strategy. There is minimal data on its use in recurrent AF. OBJECTIVE:We investigated the efficacy of VOM ethanol ablation for recurrence despite initial AF ablation. METHODS:Retrospective analysis was performed of persistent AF patients who underwent repeat ablation after an initial ablation for persistent AF. All patients had pulmonary vein isolation (PVI), posterior wall isolation (PWI), and cavotricuspid isthmus (CTI) during their previous ablation(s). At redo ablation, controls underwent confirmation and completion of previous ablation steps, substrate modification, and a search for non-PV triggers. Cases had additional VOM ethanol ablation combined with mitral isthmus ablation. RESULTS:One hundred and seven patients (49 VOM, 60 control) were included. There was no difference in AF recurrence at 1-year comparing VOM patients (47%) and controls (38%), (p = 0.39). Within the VOM group, the mean AF burden decreased from 38% preablation to 10% 12-months post (p = 0.003). The proportion of recurrent persistent AF decreased from 65% preablation to 26% post (p = 0.004). There was no significant difference in reduction in AF burden or proportion of recurrent persistent AF when comparing VOM cases and controls. Six percent of VOM patients developed intraprocedural left atrial appendage (LAA) isolation. CONCLUSIONS:In patients with previous PVI, PWI, and CTI ablation, VOM ethanol ablation did not demonstrate a reduction in AF recurrence or burden when compared with a strategy of substrate modification and trigger ablation alone and increases the risk of LAA isolation.
PMID: 41017428
ISSN: 1540-8167
CID: 5976972

Correction to: Outcomes of conventional pacemaker implantation in patients with dementia: insights from the National Readmission Database

Khalil, Mahmoud; Hashim, Ahmed; Maraey, Ahmed; Saeyeldin, Ayman; Elzanaty, Ahmed M; Biskupski, Patrick; Ong, Kenneth; Barbhaiya, Chirag R; Shokr, Mohamed
PMID: 37009940
ISSN: 1572-8595
CID: 5463592

Correction: Impact of chronic kidney disease on in-hospital mortality and clinical outcomes of catheter ablation of ventricular tachycardia: Insights from the national readmission database

Khalil, Mahmoud; Maraey, Ahmed; Aglan, Amro; Akintoye, Emmanuel; Salem, Mahmoud; Elzanaty, Ahmed M; Younes, Ahmed; Saeyeldin, Ayman; Barbhaiya, Chirag R; Shokr, Mohamed
PMID: 37009939
ISSN: 1572-8595
CID: 5463582

Artificial intelligence-enabled sinus electrocardiograms for the detection of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation benchmarked against the CHARGE-AF score

Tarabanis, Constantine; Koesmahargyo, Vidya; Tachmatzidis, Dimitrios; Sousonis, Vasileios; Bakogiannis, Constantinos; Ronan, Robert; Bernstein, Scott A; Barbhaiya, Chirag; Park, David S; Holmes, Douglas S; Kushnir, Alexander; Yang, Felix; Aizer, Anthony; Chinitz, Larry A; Tzeis, Stylianos; Vassilikos, Vassilios; Jankelson, Lior
AIMS/UNASSIGNED:We aimed to develop and externally validate a convolutional neural network (CNN) using sinus rhythm electrocardiograms (ECGs) and CHARGE-AF features to predict incident paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF), benchmarking its performance against the CHARGE-AF score. METHODS AND RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:We curated 157 192 sinus ECGs from 76 986 patients within the New York University (NYU) Langone Health system, splitting data into training, validation, and test sets. Two cohorts, from suburban US outpatient practices and Greek tertiary hospitals, were used for external validation. The model utilizing the sinus ECG signal and all CHARGE-AF features achieved the highest test set area under the receiver operator curve (AUC) (0.89) and area under the precision recall curve (AUPRC) (0.69), outperforming the CHARGE-AF score alone. Model robustness was maintained in the external US cohort (AUC 0.90, AUPRC 0.67) and the European cohort (AUC 0.85, AUPRC 0.78). Subgroup analyses confirmed consistent performance across age, sex, and race strata. A CNN using ECG signals alone retained strong predictive ability, particularly when simulating missing or inaccurate clinical data. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:Our CNN integrating sinus rhythm ECGs and CHARGE-AF features demonstrated superior predictive performance over traditional risk scoring alone for detecting incident paroxysmal AF. The model maintained accuracy across geographically and clinically diverse external validation cohorts, supporting its potential for broad implementation in AF screening strategies.
PMCID:12629645
PMID: 41267852
ISSN: 2634-3916
CID: 5976102

Improved spatial stability with a flexible tip ablation catheter in atrial fibrillation ablation

Hoffer-Hawlik, Michael A; Jankelson, Lior; Rosinski, Elizabeth; Huo, Yan; Shai, Isaac; Aizer, Anthony; Holmes, Douglas; Chinitz, Larry A; Barbhaiya, Chirag R
PMCID:12570199
PMID: 41169970
ISSN: 2666-5018
CID: 5961712

Personalized Ablation Strategies Optimize First Pass Isolation and Minimize Pulmonary Vein Reconnection During Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation Ablation

Junarta, Joey; Qiu, Jessica; Cheng, Austin V; Barbhaiya, Chirag R; Jankelson, Lior; Holmes, Douglas; Kushnir, Alexander; Knotts, Robert J; Yang, Felix; Bernstein, Scott A; Park, David S; Chinitz, Larry A; Aizer, Anthony
PMID: 39447812
ISSN: 1556-3871
CID: 5740132

Persistent Left Atrial Appendage Thrombus in Atrial Fibrillation Despite Anticoagulation

Kushnir, Alexander; Bernstein, Scott; Barbhaiya, Chirag R; Jankelson, Lior; Holmes, Douglas; Aizer, Anthony; Park, David; Spinelli, Michael; Garber, Leonard; Yang, Felix; Chinitz, Larry A
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:Assess the characteristics and management of patients with LAA thrombus despite compliance with oral anticoagulation (OAC). BACKGROUND:Atrial fibrillation guidelines consider 4 weeks of uninterrupted OAC sufficient to avoid transesophageal echocardiography to rule out left atrial appendage thrombus. However, some patients may exhibit persistent thrombus despite compliance with OAC. METHODS:Clinical history, management, and outcomes were reviewed for patients with LAA thrombus on preprocedural TEE presenting for an AF related procedure between 2021 and 2024. RESULTS:Sixty-five (1.8%) of 3653 preprocedural TEEs exhibited LAA thrombus. OAC compliance of at least 4 week was documented in 39 (60%) of these patients, including Apixaban 64%, Rivaroxaban 23%, Warfarin 8%, Dabigatran 5%. Two of these patients (3%) experienced an embolic event and 8 (12%) died during the follow up period. Resolution of LAA thrombus was documented in 12/32 patients, 6 who switched to Dabigatran, 2 to Eliquis, 1 to Warfarin, and 3 remained on Eliquis. LAA-occlusion was successfully performed in seven patients with persistent LAA thrombus. CHADS-VASc 3 or greater, HFrEF, or valvular AF were present in 37/39 of these patients. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:For 3653 patients who underwent Preprocedural TEE, 39 exhibited LAA thrombus despite compliance with OAC. Switching OAC or maintaining the same agent for longer period of time resolved the thrombus in 31% of cases. LAA-O was effective in cases where the thrombus did not resolve. Patients with non-valvular AF, compliance with OAC > 4 weeks, CHADS-VASc ≤ 2, and normal EF exhibited the lowest probability for not having a thrombus on TEE.
PMID: 40371618
ISSN: 1540-8167
CID: 5844522