Treatment Overview
If medicine is not effective or not
tolerated for
, a nonsurgical procedure called
catheter ablation may be chosen. Catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation is
relatively new and is still being studied.
In this procedure
thin, flexible wires are inserted into a vein in the groin and threaded up
through the vein and into the heart. There is an electrode at the tip of the
wires. The electrode sends out radio waves that create heat. This heat destroys
the heart tissue that causes atrial fibrillation or the heart tissue that keeps
it happening. Another option is to use freezing cold to destroy the heart
tissue.
Ablation procedures either try to cure atrial fibrillation
(focal ablation, circumferential ablation, and pulmonary vein ablation) or try
to control your symptoms (nodal ablation).
Heart Problems: Should I Have Catheter Ablation?
Ablation to cure atrial fibrillation
Focal and
circumferential catheter ablation are used to try to cure atrial fibrillation.
Focal ablation, also known as targeted ablation, is used to destroy the
specific areas in the heart that are firing off abnormal electrical impulses
and causing atrial fibrillation. Circumferential ablation is used to destroy
the tissue that lets atrial fibrillation continue. Sometimes, a doctor uses
both focal and circumferential ablation.
Pulmonary vein ablation
is also used to try to cure atrial fibrillation. Sometimes, abnormal impulses
come from inside a pulmonary vein and cause atrial fibrillation. (The pulmonary
veins bring blood back from the lungs to the heart.) Catheter ablation in a
pulmonary vein can block these impulses and keep atrial fibrillation from
happening.
A pacemaker is usually not needed when catheter
ablation is done on the pulmonary vein or other targeted tissue.
View a
to see how the heart's electrical
system works, how atrial fibrillation happens, and how pulmonary vein or focal
ablation is performed.
In some cases, catheter ablation may be
done by applying radiofrequency energy to the outside or inside surface of the
heart during open-heart surgery. This may be an option if you are already
having heart surgery for another reason, such as
or valve replacement
surgery.
Ablation to control symptoms of atrial fibrillation
Nodal catheter ablation, also known as AV node ablation, can control
symptoms of atrial fibrillation when the cause cannot be stopped. You may need
AV node ablation if targeted or pulmonary vein ablation did not stop your
atrial fibrillation, or if these procedures will not help you. With AV node
ablation, the entire
is destroyed. After the AV
node is destroyed, it can no longer send impulses to the lower chambers of the
heart (ventricles). This controls atrial fibrillation symptoms.