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Percutaneous transcatheter laser balloon ablation from the canine coronary sinus: Implications for the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome

✍ Scribed by Dr. Claudio D. Schuger; Russell T. Steinman; Michael H. Lehmann; Lucia Schuger; Deborah Boldea; Linda McMath; J. Richard Spears


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
890 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0196-8092

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✦ Synopsis


Transcatheter direct current electrical shocks for ablation of leftsided accessory pathways in Wolff-Parkinson-White patients have led to serious complications. We report the feasibility of percutaneous transcatheter laser balloon ablation of left-sided accessory pathways from the coronary sinus using a 1,064-nm, continuous wave NdYAG laser triple lumen catheter with an optical fiber terminating in a cylindrical diffusing tip within a 2- cm-long, 3-mm-diameter balloon transparent to NdYAG laser radiation. In eight mongrel dogs (18 to 31 kg), the laser balloon catheter was positioned via an 8 French guide catheter in the distal and proximal coronary sinus. During balloon inflation, two to three consecutive laser doses of 30 W X 20 sec were applied to each site (cumulative energy, 1,200 to 1,800 J). Coronary angiography, left ventriculography, and coronary sinus injection were performed before and after laser exposure. After percutaneous transcatheter laser balloon ablation, there was no evidence of mitral regurgitation, left circumflex artery, coronary sinus obstruction, or perforation. Coagulation necrosis and/or polymorphonuclear infiltrates involving the atrioventricular groove and left atrial wall over a mean length of 17 mm were present in all eight dogs sacrificed 6 & 1 hr postablation. In conclusion, percutaneous transcatheter laser balloon ablation from the coronary sinus is free of immediate major complications and may be feasible for potential interruption of left-sided accessory pathways.