Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Aug 2018)

Elimination of Purkinje Fibers by Electroporation Reduces Ventricular Fibrillation Vulnerability

  • Christopher Livia,
  • Alan Sugrue,
  • Tyra Witt,
  • Murray D. Polkinghorne,
  • Elad Maor,
  • Suraj Kapa,
  • Helge I. Lehmann,
  • Christopher V. DeSimone,
  • Atta Behfar,
  • Samuel J. Asirvatham,
  • Christopher J. McLeod

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.118.009070
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 15

Abstract

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Background The Purkinje network appears to play a pivotal role in the triggering as well as maintenance of ventricular fibrillation. Irreversible electroporation (IRE) using direct current has shown promise as a nonthermal ablation modality in the heart, but its ability to target and ablate the Purkinje tissue is undefined. Our aim was to investigate the potential for selective ablation of Purkinje/fascicular fibers using IRE. Methods and Results In an ex vivo Langendorff model of canine heart (n=8), direct current was delivered in a unipolar manner at various dosages from 750 to 2500 V, in 10 pulses with a 90‐μs duration at a frequency of 1 Hz. The window of ventricular fibrillation vulnerability was assessed before and after delivery of electroporation energy using a shock on T‐wave method. IRE consistently eradicated all Purkinje potentials at voltages between 750 and 2500 V (minimum field strength of 250–833 V/cm). The ventricular electrogram amplitude was only minimally reduced by ablation: 0.6±2.3 mV (P=0.03). In 4 hearts after IRE delivery, ventricular fibrillation could not be reinduced. At baseline, the lower limit of vulnerability to ventricular fibrillation was 1.8±0.4 J, and the upper limit of vulnerability was 19.5±3.0 J. The window of vulnerability was 17.8±2.9 J. Delivery of electroporation energy significantly reduced the window of vulnerability to 5.7±2.9 J (P=0.0003), with a postablation lower limit of vulnerability=7.3±2.63 J, and the upper limit of vulnerability=18.8±5.2 J. Conclusions Our study highlights that Purkinje tissue can be ablated with IRE without any evidence of underlying myocardial damage.

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