Resetting Irregular Hearts with 3D

FRESNO, Calif.

"When your heart starts going that fast and your chest is pounding and you just feel like you're going to pass out, it's a frightening experience," Carla Schindeler said.

Like more than five million Americans, Carla Schindeler has a racing, irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation. About 35 percent of people with it will have a stroke, but doctors like Ahmed Osman can destroy the heart tissue that causes the problem with a catheter procedure called ablation.

"What we are trying to achieve with ablation is hopefully isolate and silence the triggers for atrial fibrillation," Ahmed Osman, M.D., cardiac electrophysiologist at Broward General Medical Center said.

Doctors need precise imaging to get the best results during an ablation. Now, this technology helps them see the heart in real-time like never before.

"It has clearly and dramatically changed the way we manage the disease," Dr. Osman said.

By inserting a tiny probe in the vein, doctors get images in different planes and virtually reconstruct the left atrium. Three-dimensional mapping then enhances how doctors view and treat the heart.

"We are able to navigate very accurately inside the left atrium and achieve electrical isolation of the veins," Dr. Osman said.

Carla was treated with help from the new imaging system and says she's never felt better.

"I feel so much more comfortable now doing things because you just don't live in fear that something's going to go amiss," Carla said.

The risk of atrial fibrillation increases with age. Researchers expect the condition to affect nearly 16 million Americans by the year 2050.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Barbara Ferreira, ARNP
(954) 678-9531
Barbara.ferreira@flahrs.com

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