Zeitschrift für Kardiologie
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Radiofrequency catheter ablation has been established as a first line therapy for the curative treatment of patients with atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia and atrioventricular tachycardia encompassing accessory pathways as well as for ablation of the "normal" AV-junction. For these indications, the success rates exceed 90%. Acute complications during ablation of accessory pathway and ablation of the "normal" AV-junction occur in approximately 2-5% of patients treated. ⋯ In addition, first clinical results indicate that modification of anterograde AV-nodal conduction properties in patients with atrial fibrillation and fast ventricular rate by radiofrequency application to postero- and midseptal sites might be a useful therapeutic tool to slow ventricular rate. Because of the high success-rate and the relative low incidence of severe procedure related complications, the indications of radiofrequency ablation procedures for the treatment of supraventricular tachycardias will be extended in the future. In addition, it might be reasonable to expect that during the next years, all types of supraventricular tachycardia, except atrial fibrillation, can be targeted and cured by radiofrequency ablation in the majority of cases.
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This study reports on 16 patients suffering from cardiogenic shock in the setting of acute myocardial infarction (11 men, five women; average age: 52.5 +/- 14 years) treated by means of primary coronary angioplasty: These 16 patients were part of a total population of 261 patients suffering from acute myocardial infarction at the time of admittance to the Wuppertal Heart Center, who were consecutively treated during the period from 1/90 to 6/94 by primary coronary angioplasty without having received any prior thrombolytic therapy. For all patients, primary re-opening of the vessel infarcted was successful. The period of time between onset of pain until re-opening of the vessel averaged 176 +/- 49 min. ⋯ By now, one of the patients has received elective aorto-coronary bypass grafting; for another one, multi-vessel PTCA of non-infarcted arteries is being employed; 77% of the patients state that they are satisfied with the quality of their lives. These results demonstrate that rapid revascularization using coronary angioplasty in cardiogenic shock following acute myocardial infarction substantially improves the prognosis for survival and favorably influences long-term outcome. Thus, primary PTCA is the method of choice for treating cardiogenic shock; any patient-and particularly those resistant to lyse therapy-should immediately receive this treatment.