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UnknownNCT02814955

Electrophysiological Effects of NACOS and AVK on Pulmonary Veins and Left Atrium in Paroxysmal AF Catheter Ablation

Study of Electrophysiological Effects of NACOS and AVK on the Pulmonary Veins and the Left Atrium of Patients Referred for Paroxysmal AF Catheter Ablation

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
90 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Caen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmias with a constantly growing prevalence AF. The purpose of paroxysmal AF processing is to control outbreaks from these pulmonary veins, medicated way (antiarrhythmic) or interventional. Ablation (radiofrequency or cryotherapy) has become in this context recognized and effective treatment of AF. In addition, antithrombotic treatments in this context is a major treatments for the prevention of stroke (stroke). They are most often associated with antiarrhythmic treatment to prevent recurrence of AF or to slow it during a relapse. Recent experimental studies have highlighted the direct electrophysiological properties of dabigatran and rivaroxaban in the pulmonary veins and the left atrium. Dabigatran demonstrated in this study that it induced a prolongation of potential action in the pulmonary veins and the left atrium and it decreased the incidence of FA-induced by stimulation. Conversely, rivaroxaban induces shortening of the action potential in the left atrium (untested properties in the pulmonary veins). To our knowledge, apixaban and warfarin have not been studied in this context. It is therefore possible that some of the new oral anticoagulants (NACOS) or some AVK (fluindione and warfarin), have direct electrophysiological effects in the pulmonary veins and on the left atrium and could influence AF recurrences (with effect " antiarrhythmic-like "or rather a pro-arrhythmic effect) after ablation.A retrospective analysis conducted at the University Hospital of Caen on very low numbers suggest that patients on dabigatran would have less pulmonary veins connected in early ablation procedure that patients on warfarin or rivaroxaban. Despite the limitations inherent in this analysis (very low numbers, retrospective analysis, unique setting and having studied his own limits), these results are consistent with the fundamental studies, and thus encourage us to pursue our hypothesis to obtain more statistical power and reliability in our measurements and results. We therefore propose the study of the electrophysiological effects of NACOS (apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban) and warfarin (warfarin and fluindione) on the pulmonary veins and the left atrium of patients referred for ablation of paroxysmal AF (radiofrequency or cryotherapy ) the CHU of Caen and Tours and clinic Saint Martin Caen.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2015-06-01
Primary completion
2017-06-01
Completion
2017-09-01
First posted
2016-06-28
Last updated
2016-06-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02814955. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.