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Comparison of Different Procedural Approaches for Left Atrial Appendage Closure: Searching for Simplicity
Author(s) -
Rafael Ruíz-Salmerón,
Carlos Robles-Pérez,
María Ronquillo-Japón,
Rafael García-Borbolla,
Manuel Iglesias-Blanco,
Irene Méndez-Santos,
Carlos Rubio-Iglesias,
Julia Ginsburg,
Sergio Rodríguez-Leiras,
César Carrascosa-Rosillo,
Manuel Vizcaíno-Arellano,
J. Polo
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of interventional cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.764
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1540-8183
pISSN - 0896-4327
DOI - 10.1155/2021/8841342
Subject(s) - medicine , sedation , general anaesthesia , angiography , atrial fibrillation , anesthesia , closure (psychology) , limiting , computed tomography angiography , rotational angiography , propofol , surgery , radiology , cardiology , market economy , mechanical engineering , economics , engineering
Aim. To assess procedural and long-term efficacy and safety of two alternative methods for appendage closure, conscious sedation with standard transoesophageal echo and procedure guided by rotational angiography. Background. Demand for appendage closure is increasing, and a reasonable time-response should be given to nonvalvular atrial fibrillation patients not suitable to receive anticoagulation. General anesthesia and the need for an anesthesiologist are limiting factors to improve procedure availability; it is time to introduce simpler approaches. Methods. Single center experience in appendage closure during 9 years, using three different procedural approaches: general anesthesia with echo guidance, conscious sedation with echo guidance, and rotational angiography guidance. Conscious sedation and rotational angiography-guided procedures were performed in the absence of an anesthesiologist. Procedural characteristics and follow-up events were recorded. Results. 260 consecutive appendage closure procedures were reviewed: 155 were performed under general anesthesia (59.6%), 71 were performed with conscious sedation (27.3%), and 34 were rotational angiography guided (13.1%). Device success rate for procedures guided by rotational angiography was significantly lower than that for general anesthesia and conscious sedation (91.2% versus 100% versus 98.6%, p = 0.001 ) because there was a greater need to recapture and change device size. However, final procedural success was high and without difference between approaches (98.8% versus 97.2% versus 100%, for general anesthesia, conscious sedation, and rotational angiography, respectively); with a median follow-up of 17 months (CI 95% 13–23 month) (637.9 patients-year), there was no difference among approaches for thromboembolic (1.3 versus 1.8 versus 1.8) and major bleeding events (3.2 versus 2.8 versus 1.8), respectively. Conclusions. Appendage closure performed, either with conscious sedation with echo guidance or rotational angiography guided, is feasible, with no difference in procedural success and follow-up events compared with general anesthesia and without the limitation of the need for an anesthesiologist on-site.

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