Myocardial electrical impedance as a predictor of the quality of RF-induced linear lesions

Production of complete (i.e. continuous and transmural) cardiac lesions by radiofrequency (RF) ablation can cure certain cardiac arrhythmias. However, a predictor of lesion completeness that is reliable and can be measured intraoperatively is needed in order to maximize effectiveness of ablation therapy. Predictors that require membrane excitation or response to stimulation are not always practical. This study tested whether changes of myocardial impedance across the lesion can predict completeness. RF energy was applied epicardially on perfused rabbit ventricles to produce linear lesions that were complete (n = 25) or incomplete (noncontinuous or nontransmural, n = 25). Before and after creation of each lesion, the magnitude and phase of impedance at 1 kHz were measured with a four-electrode epicardial array across the lesion. For 16 of the lesions, the translesion stimulus-excitation delay was also measured. Lesion completeness was evaluated with 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride stain. Complete lesions increased resistivity by 26 Omega cm (21% of the preablation value, p = 0.0007, n = 17) when the inactive RF electrode remained on the epicardium during impedance measurements. When the RF electrode was removed during measurements, the rise of resistivity by complete lesions increased to 58 Omega cm (30% of the preablation value, p = 0.022, n = 8). For incomplete lesions, resistivity did not change significantly. Ablation did not significantly alter the phase of impedance. Accuracies of predictions of lesion completeness by the change in resistivity or the change in translesion stimulus-excitation delay were comparable (Youden's index 0.75 and 0.625, respectively, n = 16). Thus, RF ablation increases myocardial resistivity. The resistivity can predict lesion completeness and may provide an alternative to predictors based on excitation.

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