Phrenic nerve injury during right inferior pulmonary vein ablation with the second-generation cryoballoon: clinical, procedural, and anatomical characteristics
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
There is still sparse information regarding phrenic nerve injury (PNI) during ablation of the right inferior pulmonary vein (RIPV) by means of the second-generation cryoballoon advance (CB-A). The aim of this study was to describe the procedural, anatomical, and clinical characteristics of patients who experienced PNI during the RIPV ablation.
Consecutive patients who had undergone pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) using CB-A and suffered PNI during RIPV ablation were retrospectively included in our study. A cohort of patients who did not suffer any PNI was randomly included in a 1:3 ratio as a control group. The incidence of PNI during RIPV cryoapplication was 3.5%, (34 of 979 patients). There were no significant differences in clinical characteristics between patients with and without PNI. The prevalence of right common ostium (RCO) was significantly higher in patients with a PNI [4 patients (11.8%) vs. 1 patient (1.0%);
PNI during RIPV freeze might occur in around 3.5% of cases. The presence of an RCO and a fast temperature drop must prompt a careful monitoring of the phrenic nerve function during cryoapplications on the RIPV.
Contributors

Juan-Pablo Abugattas
Author

Carlo de Asmundis
Author

Saverio Iacopino
Author

Francesca Salghetti
Author

Ken Takarada
Author

Hugo-Enrique Coutiño
Author

Erwin Ströker
Author

Valentina De Regibus
Author

Yves de Greef
Author

Pedro Brugada
Author

Juan Sieira
Author

