Left atrial localized low-voltage areas indicate whole left atrial
electrophysiological degeneration in atrial fibrillation patients
Abstract
Background: The efficacy of ablation targeting low-voltage areas (LVAs)
is controversial, although LVA presence is well known to be associated
with AF recurrence after ablation. Atrial fibrillation (AF) substrate
may not localize within LVAs. Methods and results: This observational
study enrolled 405 consecutive patients who underwent an initial AF
ablation procedure. The left atrial voltage map was obtained after
pulmonary vein isolation. LVAs were defined as areas with voltage
< 0.5 mV. To estimate whole atrial electrophysiological
degeneration, mean regional voltage at each of 6 regions and left atrial
total conduction velocity were measured. LVAs existed in 143 of 405
(35.3%) patients. Patients with LVAs demonstrated lower mean regional
voltages throughout all 6 regions than those without LVAs (1.3 [1.8,
0.8] vs. 0.6 [1.0, 0.2] for anterior wall, p<0.001). On
the other hand, left atrial conduction velocity was lower in patients
with LVAs than in those without (0.89 [1.01, 0.74] vs. 0.93 [1.03,
0.87] m/s, p<0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that low
left atrial total conduction velocity and a higher number of regions
with mean voltage reduction were independently associated with AF
recurrence, although LVA presence was not. Conclusion: Patients with
localized left atrial LVAs were characterized by whole left atrial
electrophysiological degeneration as assessed by mean regional voltage
and conduction velocity. In addition, whole left atrial
electrophysiological degeneration parameters were well associated with
AF recurrence.