The growing number of atrial fibrillation catheter ablation procedures warranted the development of advanced cardiac mapping techniques, such as image integration between electroanatomical map and cardiac computed tomography. While scanning the chest before catheter ablation, it is frequent to detect cardiac and extracardiac collateral findings. Most collateral findings are promptly recognized as benign and do not require further attention. However, sometimes clinically relevant collateral findings are detected, which often warrant extra diagnostic examinations or even invasive procedure, and sometimes need to be followed-up over time. Even though reporting and further investigating collateral findings has not shown a clear survival benefit, almost all the working groups providing data on collateral findings reported some collateral findings eventually coming out to be malignancies, sometimes at an early stage. Therefore, there is currently no clear agreement about the right strategy to be followed.
Perna, F., Casella, M., Narducci, M. L., Dello Russo, A., Bencardino, G., Pontone, G., Pelargonio, G., Andreini, D., Vitulano, N., Pizzamiglio, F., Conte, E., Crea, F., Tondo, C., Collateral findings during computed tomography scan for atrial fibrillation ablation: Let's take a look around, <<WORLD JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY>>, 2016; 8 (4): 310-316. [doi:10.4330/wjc.v8.i4.310] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/87460]
Collateral findings during computed tomography scan for atrial fibrillation ablation: Let's take a look around
Perna, FrancescoPrimo
;Casella, MichelaSecondo
;Narducci, Maria Lucia;Dello Russo, Antonio;Bencardino, Gianluigi;Pelargonio, Gemma;Vitulano, Nicola;Crea, FilippoPenultimo
;Tondo, ClaudioUltimo
2016
Abstract
The growing number of atrial fibrillation catheter ablation procedures warranted the development of advanced cardiac mapping techniques, such as image integration between electroanatomical map and cardiac computed tomography. While scanning the chest before catheter ablation, it is frequent to detect cardiac and extracardiac collateral findings. Most collateral findings are promptly recognized as benign and do not require further attention. However, sometimes clinically relevant collateral findings are detected, which often warrant extra diagnostic examinations or even invasive procedure, and sometimes need to be followed-up over time. Even though reporting and further investigating collateral findings has not shown a clear survival benefit, almost all the working groups providing data on collateral findings reported some collateral findings eventually coming out to be malignancies, sometimes at an early stage. Therefore, there is currently no clear agreement about the right strategy to be followed.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.