Catheter Ablation

Catheter ablation is a procedure that destroys abnormal tissue in the heart wall by directly cauterizing, or heating, the muscle tissue that causes arrhythmias.

The procedure is used to:

Treat abnormal rhythms such as AV Nodal Rentrant Tachycardia, Atrial Fibrillation, Atrial Flutter, Ventricular Tachycardia, and Accessory Pathway.

Preparing for the test:

No food the morning of the procedure

These procedures are done in the EP laboratory at the hospital and typically require an overnight stay. When you come to the hospital, wear comfortable clothes. You will change into a hospital gown for the procedure. Leave all jewelry or valuables at home.

Ask your doctor what medications you are allowed to take. Your doctor may ask you to stop certain medications one to five days before your test (such as aspirin products). If you are diabetic, ask your doctor how you should adjust your diabetic medications.

Please arrange for someone to drive you home

What to expect during the test:

These procedures are done in the EP laboratory at the hospital and typically require an overnight stay. It takes about 2 – 4 hours, but more complex cases can take up to 6 hrs.
ECG electrodes are attached and an intravenous line is placed.
The blood pressure, heart rate and blood oxygen values will be monitored throughout the procedure.
The patient is taken to the EP laboratory where both groins are prepped with disinfectant and the patient ‘s whole body is draped with a sterile drape lifted up at the head area for patient comfort.
Conscious sedation is administered. These medications make the patient very sleepy but are not the same as anesthesia. The electrophysiologist injects a local anesthetic in both groin sites (this may sting and burn a bit similar to injections at the dentist).
During catheter ablation, your physician will insert several special long, flexible tubes with wires – called electrode catheters – into the veins or artery of the groin in both legs. These catheters are then positioned inside the heart in specific locations that allow recording of the electrical signals.

Some of these are used to study your arrhythmia. However, one of these catheters will be used for the actual ablation. Your physician will position the ablation catheter so that it lies on or very close to the abnormal tissue.

It is amazing how one can see inside the heart! We do so using a variety of methods. We use x-rays to guide where to place the catheters, and we can reconstruct an image of the heart just from the electrical signals themselves. Sometimes we also use sound waves – echocardiography from inside the heart.

Tachycardia is then induced, and the result is analyzed to show how the heart is electrically activated to determine the areas of the heart that are responsible for starting or perpetuating the abnormal rhythm

High-frequency electrical energy is then delivered to the small area of heart tissue under the tip of the ablation catheter to destroy the muscle tissue that is responsible for the abnormal rhythm. As a result, this tissue is no longer capable of conducting or sustaining the arrhythmia
At the end of the procedure the patient will then be transferred to recovery area and eventually to a hospital bed.

What to expect after the test:

The patient rests for 6 hrs, and typically will be able to be up the same evening.
The next morning we will see the patient, assess the groin sites and review overnight ECG strips. After review of the discharge instructions the patient can go home. Over the next 48 hours we advise light activity (up and around in the house), then back to normal activities. The patient will typically see his referring physician, often medications needed to control the heart rhythm before the ablation procedure can be stopped or modified. The risk of the fast heart rhythm returning is usually less than 5%, but depends on the type of heart rhythm problem.