MemorialCare Heart & Vascular Institute at Long Beach Medical Center
The ablation is performed by a cardiac electrophysiologist. A thin plastic tube—called a catheter—with an electrode tip is inserted into a blood vessel in your arm, groin, or neck. Using high-resolution fluoroscopic (X-ray) video and film equipment, the catheter is guided through to the heart. The electrode delivers energy through the catheter to create a lesion or scar to destroy (ablate) the location of the electrical cells of the heart that are causing the arrhythmia. This procedure is performed in a cardiovascular catheterization laboratory, with local anesthesia. An IV (intravenous line) into your arm or hand will provide you with medication to make the procedure as comfortable as possible.
Types of Ablation
- Radiofrequency ablation—a nonsurgical technique used to treat ventricular tachycardias, a type of abnormal heart rhythm (arrhythmia). During catheter ablation an electrode is guided through the artery to the heart muscle where there’s an accessory pathway (additional electrical pathway). Then a mild pulse of painless radiofrequency energy (similar to microwave heat) is transmitted to the site of the pathway. Heart muscle cells in a very small area are destroyed (ablated) to stop the heart muscle cells from conducting the extra impulses that cause rapid heartbeats.
- Cryoablation—an effective alternative to radiofrequency ablation which uses cold energy (cryo) instead of heat to treat specific types of abnormal heart rhythms (arrhythmias). During catheter ablation hollow needles (cryoprobes) are guided through the artery to the heart muscle where there’s an accessory pathway (additional electrical pathway). The cryoprobes are pressed against the heart muscle cells to freeze the abnormal tissue and to destroy (ablate) the cells. This stops the heart muscle cells from conducting the extra impulses that cause rapid heartbeats.
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