Local catheter impedance drop during pulmonary vein isolation predicts acute conduction block in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: initial results of the LOCALIZE clinical trial
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Radiofrequency ablation creates irreversible cardiac damage through resistive heating and this temperature change results in a generator impedance drop. Evaluation of a novel local impedance (LI) technology measured exclusively at the tip of the ablation catheter found that larger LI drops were indicative of more effective lesion formation. We aimed to evaluate whether LI drop is associated with conduction block in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) undergoing pulmonary vein isolation (PVI).
Sixty patients underwent LI-blinded de novo PVI using a point-by-point ablation workflow. Pulmonary vein rings were divided into 16 anatomical segments. After a 20-min waiting period, gaps were identified on electroanatomic maps. Median LI drop within segments with inter-lesion distance ≤6 mm was calculated offline. The diagnostic accuracy of LI drop for predicting segment block was assessed using receiver operating characteristic analysis.
For segments with inter-lesion distance ≤6 mm, acutely blocked segments had a significantly larger LI drop [19.8 (14.1–27.1) Ω] compared with segments with gaps [10.6 (7.8–14.7) Ω,
The magnitude of LI drop was predictive of acute PVI segment conduction block in patients with paroxysmal AF. The thinner posterior wall required smaller LI drops for block compared with the thicker anterior wall.
Contributors

Moloy Das
Author
Freeman Hospital Newcastle-Upon-Tyne , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Armin Luik
Author

Ewen Shepherd
Author

Matthew Sulkin
Author

Jacob Laughner
Author

Tobias Oesterlein
Author

Elizabeth Duffy
Author

Christian Meyer
Author

Arthur Yue
Author

Waqas Ullah
Author

Pablo Ramos
Author

Ignacio García-Bolao
Author



