Why can pulmonary vein stenoses created by radiofrequency catheter ablation worsen during and after follow-up ? A potential explanation
Radiofrequency catheter ablation of excitation foci inside pulmonary veins (PV) generates stenoses that can become quite severe during or after the follow-up period. Since severe PV stenoses have most often disastrous consequences, it would be important to identify the underlying mechanism of this temporal evolution.
The present study proposes a potential explanation based on mechanical considerations.
Methods: we have used a mathematical-physical model to examine the cyclic increase in axial wall stress induced in the proximal (= upstream), non-stenosed segment of a stenosed pulmonary vein during the forward flow phases.
In a representative example, the value of this increase at peak flow was calculated for diameter stenoses (DS) ranging from 1 to 99 %.
Results: The increase becomes appreciable at a DS of roughly 30 % and rise then strongly with further increasing DS value.
At high DS values (e.g. > 90 %) the increase is approximately twice the value of the axial stress present in the PV during the zero-flow phase.
Conclusion: Since abnormal wall stresses are known to induce damages and abnormal biological processes (e.g ., endothelium tears, elastic membrane fragmentations, matrix secretion, myofibroblast generation, etc) in the vessel wall, it seems plausible that the supplementary axial stress experienced cyclically by the stenotic and the proximal segments of the PV is responsible for the often observed progressive reduction of the vessel lumen after healing of the ablation injury. In the light of this model, the only potentially effective therapy in these cases would be to reduce the DS as strongly as possible.
This implies most probably stenting or surgery.
Author: Pierre-Andre Doriot, Pierre-Andre Dorsaz and Dipen CHANDRAKANT Shah Credits/Source: Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery 2008, 3:24
Published on: 2008-05-05
Copyright by the authors listed above - made available via BioMedCentral (Open Access). Please
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