Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Oct 2023)

Symptomatic periesophageal vagal nerve injury by different energy sources during atrial fibrillation ablation

  • Shinsuke Miyazaki,
  • Atsushi Kobori,
  • Hikari Jo,
  • Takehiko Keida,
  • Kazuyasu Yoshitani,
  • Moe Mukai,
  • Yuichiro Sagawa,
  • Tetsuya Asakawa,
  • Eiji Sato,
  • Kazuya Yamao,
  • Tomoki Horie,
  • Mamoru Manita,
  • Hidehira Fukaya,
  • Hidemori Hayashi,
  • Kojiro Tanimoto,
  • Tadateru Iwayama,
  • Suguru Chiba,
  • Akinori Sato,
  • Yukio Sekiguchi,
  • Kenta Sugiura,
  • Shinsuke Iwai,
  • Yuhei Isonaga,
  • Naoyuki Miwa,
  • Nobutaka Kato,
  • Osamu Inaba,
  • Takayoshi Hirota,
  • Yasutoshi Nagata,
  • Yuichi Ono,
  • Hitoshi Hachiya,
  • Yasuteru Yamauchi,
  • Masahiko Goya,
  • Junichi Nitta,
  • Hiroshi Tada,
  • Tetsuo Sasano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2023.1278603
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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BackgroundSymptomatic gastric hypomotility (SGH) is a rare but major complication of atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation, but data on this are scarce.ObjectiveWe compared the clinical course of SGH occurring with different energy sources.MethodsThis multicenter study retrospectively collected the characteristics and clinical outcomes of patients with SGH after AF ablation.ResultsThe data of 93 patients (67.0 ± 11.2 years, 68 men, 52 paroxysmal AF) with SGH after AF ablation were collected from 23 cardiovascular centers. Left atrial (LA) ablation sets included pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) alone, a PVI plus a roof-line, and an LA posterior wall isolation in 42 (45.2%), 11 (11.8%), and 40 (43.0%) patients, respectively. LA ablation was performed by radiofrequency ablation, cryoballoon ablation, or both in 38 (40.8%), 38 (40.8%), and 17 (18.3%) patients, respectively. SGH diagnoses were confirmed at 2 (1–4) days post-procedure, and 28 (30.1%) patients required re-hospitalizations. Fasting was required in 81 (92.0%) patients for 4 (2.5–5) days; the total hospitalization duration was 11 [7–19.8] days. After conservative treatment, symptoms disappeared in 22.3% of patients at 1 month, 48.9% at 2 months, 57.6% at 3 months, 84.6% at 6 months, and 89.7% at 12 months, however, one patient required surgery after radiofrequency ablation. Symptoms persisted for >1-year post-procedure in 7 patients. The outcomes were similar regardless of the energy source and LA lesion set.ConclusionsThe clinical course of SGH was similar regardless of the energy source. The diagnosis was often delayed, and most recovered within 6 months, yet could persist for over 1 year in 10%.

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