Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3006260 Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases 2015 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most commonly encountered sustained cardiac rhythm disorder, is an independent risk factor for stroke, heart failure and death, and its development is promoted by a range of common cardiovascular pathologies. The management of AF is directed at these predisposing conditions, at reducing the risk of systemic thromboembolism, and towards rate or rhythm control of the arrhythmia. Guidelines increasingly support the use of catheter ablation (CA) as an early management strategy, with the efficacy of CA crucially dependent on the extent of left atrial (LA) structural remodeling; LA imaging plays a central role in each of identifying comorbidities, risk stratification for stroke, and identification of suitable candidates for CA. An understanding of the strengths and limitations of various echocardiographic modalities, of cardiac computed tomography and of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is therefore an increasingly important part of the armory of the electrophysiologist. In particular, individualized use of imaging to select patients more likely to benefit from CA of AF is important, and post-procedural imaging to evaluate the extent of reverse LA remodeling after CA is critical to appropriate decisions regarding ongoing anti-arrhythmic therapy and long-term anticoagulation.

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