4.4 Article

Limitations of Baseline Impedance, Impedance Drop and Current for Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation Monitoring: Insights from In silico Modeling

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcdd9100336

Keywords

biophysics; computer modeling; impedance; radiofrequency catheter ablation

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades/Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (MCIN/AEI) [RTI2018-094357-B-C21]
  2. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica de Argentina [PICT-2016-2303]
  3. Programa de Becas Externas Postdoctorales para Jovenes Investigadores del CONICET (Argentina)

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This study simulated left atrial radiofrequency catheter ablation to investigate the contributions of local and remote impedance to the electrical circuit and found that identical baseline impedance and RF current can result in significantly different lesion sizes with different relative contributions of local and remote impedances.
Background: Baseline impedance, radiofrequency current, and impedance drop during radiofrequency catheter ablation are thought to predict effective lesion formation. However, quantifying the contributions of local versus remote impedances provides insights into the limitations of indices using those parameters. Methods: An in silico model of left atrial radiofrequency catheter ablation was used based on human thoracic measurements and solved for (1) initial impedance (Z), (2) percentage of radiofrequency power delivered to the myocardium and blood (3) total radiofrequency current, (4) impedance drop during heating, and (5) lesion size after a 25 W-30 s ablation. Remote impedance was modeled by varying the mixing ratio between skeletal muscle and fat. Local impedance was modeled by varying insertion depth of the electrode (ID). Results: Increasing the remote impedance led to increased baseline impedance, lower system current delivery, and reduced lesion size. For ID = 0.5 mm, Z ranged from 115 to 132 omega when fat percentage varied from 20 to 80%, resulting in a decrease in the RF current from 472 to 347 mA and a slight decrease in lesion size from 5.6 to 5.1 mm in depth, and from 9.2 to 8.0 mm in maximum width. In contrast, increasing the local impedance led to lower system current but larger lesions. For a 50% fat-muscle mixture, Z ranged from 118 to 138 omega when ID varied from 0.3 to 1.9 mm, resulting in a decrease in the RF current from 463 to 443 mA and an increase in lesion size, from 5.2 up to 7.5 mm in depth, and from 8.4 up to 11.6 mm in maximum width. In cases of nearly identical Z but different contributions of local and remote impedance, markedly different lesions sizes were observed despite only small differences in RF current. Impedance drop better predicted lesion size (R-2 > 0.93) than RF current (R-2 < 0.1). Conclusions: Identical baseline impedances and observed RF currents can lead to markedly different lesion sizes with different relative contributions of local and remote impedances to the electrical circuit. These results provide mechanistic insights into the advantage of measuring local impedance and identifies potential limitations of indices incorporating baseline impedance or current to predict lesion quality.

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