1. Higher F-wave frequency associates with poor procedural success rate after Maze procedure
- Author
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Rena Usui, Masato Mutsuga, Yuji Narita, Yoshiyuki Tokuda, Sachie Terazawa, Hideki Ito, Wataru Uchida, Yasuya Inden, Toyoaki Murohara, and Akihiko Usui
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Maze Procedure ,Treatment Outcome ,Atrial Fibrillation ,Catheter Ablation ,Humans ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,Cardiac Surgical Procedures ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) causes atrial remodeling, which causes myocardial fibrosis and micro-reentry. Fibrosis may reduce wave voltage and micro-reentry may enhance the dominant frequency (DF) of the F-wave. We investigated whether the DF predicts procedural success by the Maze procedure.In 138 consecutive patients who underwent mitral valve surgery and a modified Cox-Maze III procedure for persistent AF in Nagoya University in 2002-2018, 96 (70%) were successfully cardioverted (group S); 42 had persistent or relapsed AF after surgery (group F). Patient data were compared between the groups. Cut-off values were determined by an ROC analysis and predictors of procedural success were evaluated. The DF was obtained from the F-wave of V1 by a high-speed Fourier analysis using the CEPAS software program.Group F showed a significantly larger LA diameter, better LVEF, lower F-wave voltage, higher DF, and longer duration of AF. The cut-off values were as follows: LA diameter, 56 mm; EF, 64.5%; F-wave voltage, 0.13 mV; DF, 7.3 Hz; and duration of AF, 44 months. Each factor showed statistical significance in a univariate analysis; DF lost significance in the multivariate analysis. The higher (DF ≥ 7.3 Hz) and lower voltage group (≤ 0.13 mV) showed the worst procedural success rate (36%), while the lower DF ( 7.3 Hz) and higher voltage group ( 0.13 mV) showed a good rate (86%).The DF of the F-wave is a useful predictor of procedural success after the Maze procedure in addition to the voltage of F-wave.
- Published
- 2022