Termination of persistent atrial fibrillation by ablating sites that control large atrial areas
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) has been explained by multiple mechanisms which, while they conflict, all agree that more disorganized AF is more difficult to treat than organized AF. We hypothesized that persistent AF consists of interacting organized areas which may enlarge, shrink or coalesce, and that patients whose AF areas enlarge by ablation are more likely to respond to therapy.
We mapped vectorial propagation in persistent AF using wavefront fields (WFF), constructed from raw unipolar electrograms at 64-pole basket catheters, during ablation until termination (Group 1,
Mapping wavefront vectors in persistent AF revealed competing organized areas. Ablation that progressively enlarged remaining areas was acutely successful, and sites where ablation terminated AF were surrounded by large organized areas. Patients in whom large organized areas did not emerge during ablation did not exhibit AF termination. Further studies should define how fibrillatory activity is organized within such areas and whether this approach can guide ablation.
Contributors

Neal K Bhatia
Author

Albert J Rogers
Author

David E Krummen
Author

Samir Hossainy
Author

William Sauer
Author

John M Miller
Author

Mahmood I Alhusseini
Author

Adam Peszek
Author

Erin Armenia
Author

Tina Baykaner
Author

Johannes Brachmann
Author

Mintu P Turakhia
Author

Paul Clopton
Author

Paul J Wang
Author

Wouter-Jan Rappel
Author

