Pulsed-field ablation: An alternative ablative method for gastric electrophysiological intervention.

American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology(2024)

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Abstract
Pulsed-field ablation (PFA) is an emerging ablative technology that has been used successfully to eliminate cardiac arrhythmias. As a non-thermal technique it has significant benefits over traditional radio-frequency ablation with improved target tissue specificity and reduced risk of adverse events during cardiac applications. We investigated whether PFA is safe for use in the stomach and whether it could modulate gastric slow waves. Female weaner pigs were fasted overnight before anesthesia was induced using tiletamine hydrochloride (50 mg mL-1) and zolazepam hydrochloride (50 mg mL-1) and maintained with propofol (Diprivan 2%, 0.2‑0.4 mg kg‑1 min‑1). Pulsed-field ablation was performed on their gastric serosa in vivo. Adjacent point lesions (n=2-4) were used to create a linear injury using bipolar pulsed-field ablation consisting of 40 pulses (10 Hz frequency, 0.1 ms pulse width, 1000 V amplitude). High-resolution electrical mapping defined baseline and post-ablation gastric slow-wave patterns. A validated five-point scale was used to evaluate tissue damage in hematoxylin and eosin stained images. Results indicated that PFA successfully induced complete conduction blocks in all cases, with lesions through the entire thickness of the gastric muscle layers. Consistent post-ablation slow-wave patterns emerged immediately following ablation and persisted over the study period. Pulsed-field ablation induces rapid conduction blocks as a tool to modulate slow-wave patterns, indicating it may be suitable as an alternative to radio-frequency ablation.
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