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The impact of conscious sedation on induced cardiac arrhythmia prior to catheter ablation

Title: The impact of conscious sedation on induced cardiac arrhythmia prior to catheter ablation
Authors: Roithinger, F; Pfeffer, M; Tscharre, M; Riedl, J; Resch, T; Tokarska, L; Weiser, C; Fiedler, L; Haas, M; Roithinger, F X
Source: Europace ; volume 27, issue Supplement_1 ; ISSN 1099-5129 1532-2092
Publisher Information: Oxford University Press (OUP)
Publication Year: 2025
Description: Does conscious sedation with ketamine and midazolam influence inducibility of supraventricular tachycardia prior to catheter ablation? Background Catheter ablation has become the standard treatment for many arrhythmias. Despite the possible patient discomfort, many centers perform an electrophysiologic study (EPS) for ablation of documented or suspected supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) without sedation, for the fear to hamper tachycardia inducibility and ablation success. Study aim To test the hypothesis that during an EPS, a regimen of sedation with ketamine and midazolam is non-inferior to an EPS without sedation with respect to inducibility of sustained SVT prior to catheter ablation. Patients and methods A total of 54 patients undergoing EPS for documented or suspected SVT were studied (24 female, age 54±years, hypertension, N=16, diabetes, N=3, coronary artery disease, N=3). Each patient was serving as his own control. A standard programmed stimulation protocol was performed without sedation and repeated, following conscious sedation with ketamine and midazolam. The protocol included, in a stepwise, more aggressive fashion, until a sustained SVT could be induced or refractoriness was reached: atrial pacing at fixed, increasing rates (S1), pacing at a drive cycle length of 500ms for 8 beats, then inducing an extra stimulus with a decreasing coupling interval until refractory period is reached (S2), inducing a second extra stimulus with a decreasing coupling interval (S3). If no arrhythmia could be induced by then, isoprenaline was administered. In some patients, SVT was mechanically induced (sinus rhythm). Data are presented as absolute numbers (%). A RMLE analysis was used to assess non-inferiority (arrhythmia inducible while being conscious and while been sedated). A Stuart-Maxwell test was used for comparison of paired ordinal data. Patient comfort was assessed for the conscious and the sedated state, using a scale from 1-7 (1: perfect; 7: horror). Results Arrhythmia was inducible in 51 (94.4%) ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1093/europace/euaf085.193
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1093/europace/euaf085.193; https://academic.oup.com/europace/article-pdf/27/Supplement_1/euaf085.193/63304503/euaf085.193.pdf
Rights: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.3BE6637C
Database: BASE