Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print First human use of new device to make arrhythmia treatment safer

First human use of new device to make arrhythmia treatment safer

July 17, 2008

On June 16, 2008, Barbara Ganschow of Palatine, IL, became the first person in the world to be successfully treated with a new device designed to make it safer and easier for heart specialists to create a hole in the cardiac atrial septum. The hole, created by the NRGTM Transseptal Needle, allows cardiac catheters to cross from the right side of the heart to the left side.

"This may seem like a small component of the overall procedure, but when you are maneuvering within the heart everything is significant," said Bradley Knight, MD, director of cardiac electrophysiology at the University of Chicago Medical Center, who performed the procedure. "This is a complicated and delicate cardiac intervention, so having the tools to control each step is something that enhances our confidence and extends the number of patients we can help."




Ganschow, 80, suffered from atrial fibrillation, an irregular, overly rapid heart rate. During atrial fibrillation, the heart's two upper chambers (the atria) beat chaotically, out of synch with the two lower chambers (the ventricles) of the heart. This causes poor blood flow to the body, resulting in symptoms such as shortness of breath, weakness and confusion.

For Ganschow--an avid traveler who was remarkably healthy for the first 75 years of her life--the irregular heart rhythm first appeared five years ago, during a 23-hour flight back to Chicago from South Africa. "I just felt awful," she recalled. "It was a miserable flight."

She called her physician as soon as she landed. He promptly sent her to the hospital, where she was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation. Her cardiologist tried to treat the problem with medications for a year, with mixed results, then sent her to a heart rhythm specialist at Good Shepherd Hospital, near her home.

He inserted a catheter through a vein in the groin and guided it into her left atrium, where he used it to deliver radio-frequency energy to ablate the "trouble spot" in her heart, eliminating the problematic electrical pathway that was causing the problem.

That worked--for three years. Then the abnormal rhythm returned. This time it was even worse. Ganschow began to feel tired, and often disoriented. "My legs would just give out," she said. Worse yet, it meant no more traveling. "I did not leave the house with atrial fibrillation," she said.

Because of scar tissue that formed after the first procedure, however, her doctors could not repeat the initial treatment, which required mechanically poking a hole in the septum with a long needle, then passing the catheter through that hole, across the atrial septum, from the right side of the heart to the left, where the problem was centered.

So her cardiologist at Good Shepherd referred her to the University of Chicago Medical Center's Knight, MD, a specialist in difficult cases.

The NRGTM Transseptal needle was designed for the increasing number of patients like Ganshow, whose previous procedures make it dangerous or impossible to cross her septum safely with the traditional needle. Instead of using uncontrolled mechanical force, this new insulated transseptal needle has a closed end that safely delivers radiofrequency energy to create a small hole in the atrial septum, allowing the needle to pass to the left atrium with increased efficacy and control.

Using this device, Knight was able to pass the catheter smoothly from the right to the left atrium so that the ablation procedure could be performed to eradicate the problem. Ganschow went home the next day and recovered quickly.

"I feel good," she said two days after the procedure. "It gets better day by day."

A week later, she upgraded that to "I feel fantastic. I have my life back and I'm so glad."

Less than two weeks after her treatment, she'll do something she hasn't considered since that long fateful flight from South Africa. She'll step onto an airplane, for a quick trip to New York. "I'm not 80," she explained, "when I'm not in A-fib."

University of Chicago Medical Center



Related Atrial Fibrillation Current Events and Atrial Fibrillation News Articles Atrial Fibrillation Current Events and Atrial Fibrillation News RSS Atrial Fibrillation Current Events and Atrial Fibrillation News RSS
Size matters: Obesity leading risk factor of left atrial enlargement during aging
Aside from aging itself, obesity appears to be the most powerful predictor of left atrial enlargement (LAE), upping one's risk of atrial fibrillation (the most common type of arrhythmia), stroke and death.

Experts unveil new CVD guidelines and position papers
Several new guidelines and position papers offering the most up to date information to ensure that clinicians practice evidence-based medicine were released at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress 2009 this week.

Learning the risks for stroke - and taking action
With this theme in mind, the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) emphasises that most of the risks for stroke are also the major risks for coronary heart disease - and thus the object of the ESC's far-reaching prevention programme.

Afib triggered by a cell that resembles a pigment-producing skin cell
The source and mechanisms underlying the abnormal heart beats that initiate atrial fibrillation (Afib), the most common type of abnormal heart beat, have not been well determined.

New blood-thinning drug safer than rat poison
In an article reviewed by F1000 Medicine Faculty Members Robert Ruff, Brian Olshansky and Luis Ruilope, the blood-thinner dabigatran is shown to protect against stroke, blood clotting and major bleeding as effectively as warfarin, but with fewer side effects.

Women with diabetes at increased risk for irregular heart rhythm
Diabetes increases by 26 percent the likelihood that women will develop atrial fibrillation (AF), a potentially dangerous irregular heart rhythm that can lead to stroke, heart failure, and chronic fatigue.

Women with Atrial Fibrillation Are at Significantly Higher Risk of Stroke and Death Compared to Men and Receive Less Attention
Even though the incidence of atrial fibrillation is higher in men than women, a review of past studies and medical literature completed by cardiac experts at Rush University Medical Center shows that women are more likely than men to experience symptomatic attacks, a higher frequency of recurrences, and significantly higher heart rates during atrial fibrillation, which increases the risk of stroke.

Mount Sinai first in nation to ablate atrial fibrillation using new visually-guided balloon catheter
Physicians at The Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York became the first in the U.S. to ablate atrial fibrillation using a visually-guided laser balloon catheter.

Atrial fibrillation: Drugs or ablation?
Atrial fibrillation ablation is one of the fastest growing techniques in cardiology and due to the very high number of patients that might be candidates to this procedure, a significant number of resources will have to be devoted to it to be able to treat them in the following years.

Irbesartan reduces heart failure in patients with quivering heart
Most research in atrial fibrillation (AF) has focused on reducing stroke and other embolic events. Yet heart failure occurs more frequently in AF patients, but has not been the focus of intervention research.
More Atrial Fibrillation Current Events and Atrial Fibrillation News Articles
Atrial Fibrillation: From Bench to Bedside (Contemporary Cardiology)

Atrial Fibrillation: From Bench to Bedside (Contemporary Cardiology)
by Andrea Natale (Editor), José Jalife (Editor)

Advancements in the treatment and prevention of Atrial Fibrillation are presented in this important new book. Atrial Fibrillation affects approximately 2.5 million individuals in the United States and is projected to affect 15 million individuals by 2050. In Atrial Fibrillation: From Bench to Bedside, the reader is provided with the latest information that is critically important in the daily care and for the potential cure of patients with Atrial Fibrillation. Each chapter deals with a different aspect of Atrial Fibrillation and was authored by internationally recognized experts in the evolving field of cardiac electrophysiology. This book is a single source that provides a multi-perspective look at and approach to Atrial Fibrillation. Because Atrial Fibrillation is so prevalent and...

Atrial Fibrillation (Home Use)

Atrial Fibrillation (Home Use)

Part of the award winning public television series Healthy Body/Healthy Mind. You know the signs...rapid heart beat... shortness of breath... panic! Sounds like a heart attack, or panic disorder. More often, it is Atrial Fibrillation, an irregular heartbeat disorder than can cause the heart to beat more than 300 times a minute. More than 2 million people have Atrial Fibrillation. Here's what happens: because of a problem with the electrical wiring in the heart, the two small upper chambers, the atria, quiver instead of beating effectively. This quivering causes the discomfort the patient feels, and can cause the blood to pool and clot. If a piece of blood clot leaves the heart and becomes lodged in an artery in the brain, a stroke results. About fifteen percent of strokes occur in people...

Atrial Fibrillation : My Heart, the Doctors, and Me

Atrial Fibrillation : My Heart, the Doctors, and Me
by E. A. Butler (Author)

An Investigative Report by an Inquisitive Patient

The author felt compelled to write this story after discovering he had paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. He had little previous experience with personal illnesses. Now he found himself dealing with production line medicine. This experience fostered skepticism, doubts, apprehensions and grave concerns. He discovered he was afflicted with one of the most elusive and complex cardiovascular problems that involves the electrical impulse of the heart. This led him to unleash his investigative experience to find out why more hasn't been done to cure the malady.

  Atrial Fibrillation - The Most Common Arrhythmia (Have A Heart Series)
Starring: Dr. Gerry Maddoux
Directed By: Mark Baer
Also With: Dr. Gerry Maddoux (Writer), Mark Baer (Producer)



A Practical Approach To Catheter Ablation Of Atrial Fibrillation

A Practical Approach To Catheter Ablation Of Atrial Fibrillation
by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

A Practical Approach to Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation : A Practical Approach to Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation Pub Date: April 2008 Product Type: Print Author/s: Hugh Calkins MD; Pierre Jais MD; Jonathan S Steinberg MD Written and edited by expert electrophysiologists, this book is a practical, well-illustrated guide to the most successful techniques for catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation. While other texts address ablation of different arrhythmias, this is the first book to focus specifically on atrial fibrillation.Chapters explain how to establish programs and laboratories for treating atrial fibrillation; use complex imaging modalities and guidance systems; implement a variety of catheter-based ablation strategies, either isolated or in...

Atrial Fibrillation (Fundamental and Clinical Cardiology)

Atrial Fibrillation (Fundamental and Clinical Cardiology)
by Peter Kowey (Editor), Gerald Naccarelli (Editor)

Filling a gap in the literature, this all-encompassing reference explores the epidemiology, mechanisms, and pathophysiology of atrial fibrillation and compiles the latest diagnostic and treatment practices for patient care. The book summarizes the most recent advances in symptom relief, drug development, device management, and long-term control of heart rhythm abnormalities and reviews the latest studies on the prevention of stroke and other thromboembolic events in patients with valvular and nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. Finally, it offers new strategies to improve the therapy and outcomes of patients suffering from the myriad of complications associated with atrial fibrillation.

Atrial Fibrillation - The Most Common Arrhythmia (Have A Heart Series)

Atrial Fibrillation - The Most Common Arrhythmia (Have A Heart Series)
Directed By: Mark Baer
Also With: Mark Baer (Producer), Dr. Gerry Maddoux (Writer)

* 2 Million people in America have atrial fibrillation.

* Advancing age, high blood pressure and diabetes are common causes.

* Embolic stroke (clot from the fibrillating left atrium) is the most common complication. This can be largely prevented with anticoagulation.

* You can have a normal, healthy lifespan with atrial fibrillation.

This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.

A Practical Approach to Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation (Practical Approach (Lippincott & Wilkins))

A Practical Approach to Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation (Practical Approach (Lippincott & Wilkins))
by Hugh Calkins (Editor), Pierre Jais (Editor), Jonathan S Steinberg (Editor)

Written and edited by expert electrophysiologists, this book is a practical, well-illustrated guide to the most successful techniques for catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation. While other texts address ablation of different arrhythmias, this is the first book to focus specifically on atrial fibrillation. Chapters explain how to establish programs and laboratories for treating atrial fibrillation; use complex imaging modalities and guidance systems; implement a variety of catheter-based ablation strategies, either isolated or in tandem; monitor the ablated patient's course for complications and arrhythmia recurrence; and manage these problems should they arise. The chapters on lab staffing and equipment, pre-procedure preparation, and post-procedure care will be of special interest to...

Critical Care Compendium

Critical Care Compendium
by Mind-Forge Education Services LLC

This is a collection of Self Learning Modules and pocket guides. Below are some of the modules and pocket guides in this product. **A quick handy guide to quickly interpret the 12 lead electrocardiogram, identify ischemia, reciprocal changes and to quickly localize a myocardial infarction and involved coronary arteries. **A brief presentation on atrial fibrillation/flutter, optimal monitoring leads, causes and complications related to open heart surgery. **A brief over view of current Advanced Cardiac Life Support treatment algorithms. **ACLS 2006 Code Drugs: Detailed description of 2006 ACLS code drugs and drip charts. (Current for 2007) **A detailed guide to the autonomic nervous system with emphasis placed on parasympathetic and sympathetic involvement and pharmacological...

  Atrial Fibrillation - The Most Common Arrhythmia (Have A Heart Series)
Starring: Dr. Gerry Maddoux
Directed By: Mark Baer
Also With: Dr. Gerry Maddoux (Writer), Mark Baer (Producer)



© 2009 BrightSurf.com