Cardiac ablation corrects heart arrhythmia
Q. When doctors perform a cardiac ablation, what do they use to clean the heart?
This question made me laugh because I had the same misconception as the correspondent. We both confused ablation with ablution.
Ablation is a surgical excision of tissue. Ablution is a cleansing with water or another liquid.
Cardiac
ablation corrects heart arrhythmias by destroying tissue that blocks
the electrical signal traveling through your heart to make it beat. By
clearing the signal pathway of the abnormal tissue, your heart can beat
properly again.
Normally,
an electrical signal spreads from the top of your heart to the bottom.
As it travels, the electrical signal causes your heart to contract and
pump blood. The process repeats with each new heartbeat.
A surgeon makes a small cut into one of the blood vessels of the groin, neck or arm. Then a catheter is inserted into the
vessel and guided by X-ray into the heart. Flexible tubes with
electrodes are run through the catheter. The electrodes locate the
problem area and destroy it.
Radiofrequency
(RF) energy usually is used for catheter ablation. This type of energy
uses radio waves to produce heat that destroys the heart tissue. Studies
have shown that RF energy is safe and effective. However, the energy
used in the procedure can come from extreme cold (cryoablation) or
lasers.
Cardiac
ablation is done in a hospital by a specially trained staff. The
procedure lasts three to six hours. Some people go home the same day as
the procedure. Others need to be admitted for one or more days.
Most
people return to their normal activities in a few days. Before the
procedure, a patient is given a drug intravenously for relaxation. The
surgeon then numbs the catheter insertion site. Patients may experience
some burning sensations during the procedure.
Your doctor may
recommend catheter ablation if medicine can’t control your arrhythmia or
if you are at risk for a life-threatening type of arrhythmia or sudden
cardiac arrest.
The
risk of complications from catheter ablation is higher if you are older
than 75 or have diabetes or kidney disease. These risks include:
bleeding, infection and pain at the insertion site; blood-vessel damage;
a heart puncture; damage to the heart’s electrical system; blood clots,
which could lead to stroke or other complications; narrowing of the
veins that carry blood from the lungs to the heart.
Although
catheter ablation is often successful, some people need repeat
procedures. You may also need to take medications, even after you’ve had
ablation.
Fred
Cicetti is a freelance writer who specializes in health. He has been
writing professionally since 1963. Before he began freelancing, he was a
reporter and columnist for three daily newspapers in New Jersey. If you
would like to ask a question, write to [email protected].