Objective To summarize safety and effectiveness of cryomaze ablation procedure concomitant with valve surgery. Methods We retrospectively investigated the clinical data of 62 patients (24 males and 38 females) with mean age of 49.4±14.2 years who underwent cryomaze ablation procedure concomitant with valve surgery in our hospital from August 2013 through July 2015. The heart rhythm of the patients after surgery was supervised by 12-leads electrical cardiogram respectively. Results The rate of sinus rhythm restored right after surgery was 98.4%. The rate of sinus rhythm restored at the time of discharge was 93.4%. The rate of sinus rhythm restored 3 months, 6 months, 12 months, 18 months after surgery was 90.2%, 87.3%, 85.0%, 83.3% respectively. The one-year post-operation rate of sinus rhythm restored for the group of right minimal invasive thoracoscopic assisted mitral valve surgery was 90.5%. Longer duration for atrial fibrillation (>7 years) was a risk factor for the reoccurrence of atrial fibrillation 1 year after surgery (P<0.05). Conclusion Cryomaze ablation procedure concomitant with valve surgery is quite effective in treatment of rheumatic valve disease and atrial fibrillation. This approach is associated with fewer complications, comparable atrial fibrillation reoccurrence for short-term follow-up.
ObjectiveTo analyze the early and mid-term safety and effectiveness of concomitant cryosurgical Cox-Maze Ⅳ procedure in minimally invasive mitral valve surgery.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed the clinical data of 68 patients (28 males and 40 females with a mean age of 38.7±9.3 years) who underwent concomitant cryosurgical Cox-Maze Ⅳ procedure in minimally invasive mitral valve and tricuspid surgery in the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery of the Second Xiangya Hospital from August 2013 to October 2017. The heart rhythm of the patients after surgery was supervised by 24 hour holter monitoring eletrocardiogram.ResultsNo death occurred during operation and follow-up. One patient underwent reexploration for bleeding. The rate of sinus rhythm restored at the time of discharge was 95.8%. The rate of sinus rhythm restored at 6 months, 12 months, 24 months, 36 months after surgery was 93.5%, 91.6%, 90.3% and 89.5% respectively.ConclusionConcomitant cryosurgical Cox-Maze Ⅳ procedure in minimally invasive mitral valve surgery is quite safe and effective in treatment of rheumatic mitral valve disease and atrial fibrillation in the early and mid-term follow-up.
Objective To analyze the current status and hotspots of surgical transmural ablation of atrial fibrillation using CiteSpace and VOSviewer. MethodsThe Web of Science Core Collection database was used as the data source. The CiteSpace 5.8.R3 and VOSviewer software were used to analyze the related studies on surgical transmural ablation of atrial fibrillation about the authors, countries/institutions, literature co-citation and keywords. Results A total of 109 articles were enrolled. Damiano RJ was the most prolific researcher, while Cox JL was the author with the highest number of citations. The United States was the leading country in this research field. The University of Washington was an important institution in the study of atrial fibrillation transmural ablation. The main hotpots were the effectiveness of surgical ablation, especially Cox-maze procedure, selection of the energy source of surgical ablation, combination of surgical and catheter ablations, and pulmonary vein isolation. ConclusionThis study visualizes the current research status of surgical ablation of atrial fibrillation. How to improve the effectiveness and transmurality of surgical ablation is a hot research topic in the surgical treatment of atrial fibrillation. The combination of electrophysiology mapping and surgical ablation may be the development direction in the surgical treatment of atrial fibrillation.