Development of an atrial transseptal puncture procedure in horses to access the left heart : an ultrasound‐guided jugular vein and transhepatic approach
- Author
- Ingrid Vernemmen (UGent) , Glenn Van Steenkiste (UGent) , Eva Buschmann (UGent) , Kristoff Cornelis, Stijn Schauvliege (UGent) , Lara Ibrahim (UGent) , Annelies Decloedt (UGent) and Gunther van Loon (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
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- Echocardiography-based imaging techniques for guidance of minimally-invasive intracardiac procedures in horses.
- Echocardiography-based imaging techniques for guidance of minimally-invasive intracardiac procedures in horses
- Transcatheter radiofrequency ablation as a new treatment for equine atrial arrhythmias
- State-of-the-art ultrasound system for advanced imaging in horses and small animals
- Abstract
- Background: Radiofrequency ablation has been successfully applied to treat right atrial arrhythmias in horses. Ablation of left‐sided arrhythmias requires a retrograde transarterial approach which is complicated. In human medicine, the left atrium is accessed through transseptal puncture (TSP) of the fossa ovalis (FO) using a caudal approach via the femoral vein. Objectives: To develop a zero fluoroscopy TSP technique for horses using a jugular vein (cranial) and transhepatic (caudal) approach. Study design: In vivo experimental study. Methods: Transseptal puncture was performed in 18 horses admitted for euthanasia and donated for scientific research under general anaesthesia: using a jugular vein approach (10 horses), a transhepatic approach (2 horses) or both (6 horses). Radiofrequency energy was applied on a guidewire to perforate the FO and allow sheath advancement under intracardiac and transthoracic echocardiographic guidance. Puncture lesions were inspected post‐mortem. Results: Transseptal puncture was successful in 17/18 horses, of which 15/16 jugular vein approaches and 5/8 transhepatic approaches. Failure was due to technical malfunction, inability to advance the guidewire toward the heart and inability to advance the sheath through the FO. Intracardiac echocardiography was essential to safely guide the puncture process. Atrial arrhythmias caused by the TSP occurred in 13/18 horses. Puncture lesions were found in the right atrium in the FO region, and left atrium ventral to pulmonary vein ostium III. Main limitations: Because in several horses two approaches were tested consecutively, it cannot be excluded that the second TSP was performed at the previous puncture site. Due to the developmental nature of the study the approaches were not randomised and did not allow comparison. Conclusion: Transseptal puncture is feasible in horses using ultrasound guidance and allows for electrophysiological exploration of the left heart. Further studies are needed to evaluate post‐operative follow‐up.
- Keywords
- General Medicine, ablation, horse, interventional cardiology, intracardiac echocardiography, left heart catheterisation, mapping, zero-fluoroscopy
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HSWY78EJ9AV3JY8V0WB6J7H3
- MLA
- Vernemmen, Ingrid, et al. “Development of an Atrial Transseptal Puncture Procedure in Horses to Access the Left Heart : An Ultrasound‐guided Jugular Vein and Transhepatic Approach.” EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, vol. 57, no. 1, 2025, pp. 243–55, doi:10.1111/evj.14084.
- APA
- Vernemmen, I., Van Steenkiste, G., Buschmann, E., Cornelis, K., Schauvliege, S., Ibrahim, L., … van Loon, G. (2025). Development of an atrial transseptal puncture procedure in horses to access the left heart : an ultrasound‐guided jugular vein and transhepatic approach. EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, 57(1), 243–255. https://doi.org/10.1111/evj.14084
- Chicago author-date
- Vernemmen, Ingrid, Glenn Van Steenkiste, Eva Buschmann, Kristoff Cornelis, Stijn Schauvliege, Lara Ibrahim, Annelies Decloedt, and Gunther van Loon. 2025. “Development of an Atrial Transseptal Puncture Procedure in Horses to Access the Left Heart : An Ultrasound‐guided Jugular Vein and Transhepatic Approach.” EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL 57 (1): 243–55. https://doi.org/10.1111/evj.14084.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Vernemmen, Ingrid, Glenn Van Steenkiste, Eva Buschmann, Kristoff Cornelis, Stijn Schauvliege, Lara Ibrahim, Annelies Decloedt, and Gunther van Loon. 2025. “Development of an Atrial Transseptal Puncture Procedure in Horses to Access the Left Heart : An Ultrasound‐guided Jugular Vein and Transhepatic Approach.” EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL 57 (1): 243–255. doi:10.1111/evj.14084.
- Vancouver
- 1.Vernemmen I, Van Steenkiste G, Buschmann E, Cornelis K, Schauvliege S, Ibrahim L, et al. Development of an atrial transseptal puncture procedure in horses to access the left heart : an ultrasound‐guided jugular vein and transhepatic approach. EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL. 2025;57(1):243–55.
- IEEE
- [1]I. Vernemmen et al., “Development of an atrial transseptal puncture procedure in horses to access the left heart : an ultrasound‐guided jugular vein and transhepatic approach,” EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, vol. 57, no. 1, pp. 243–255, 2025.
@article{01HSWY78EJ9AV3JY8V0WB6J7H3,
abstract = {{Background: Radiofrequency ablation has been successfully applied to treat right atrial arrhythmias in horses. Ablation of left‐sided arrhythmias requires a retrograde transarterial approach which is complicated. In human medicine, the left atrium is accessed through transseptal puncture (TSP) of the fossa ovalis (FO) using a caudal approach via the femoral vein. Objectives: To develop a zero fluoroscopy TSP technique for horses using a jugular vein (cranial) and transhepatic (caudal) approach. Study design: In vivo experimental study. Methods: Transseptal puncture was performed in 18 horses admitted for euthanasia and donated for scientific research under general anaesthesia: using a jugular vein approach (10 horses), a transhepatic approach (2 horses) or both (6 horses). Radiofrequency energy was applied on a guidewire to perforate the FO and allow sheath advancement under intracardiac and transthoracic echocardiographic guidance. Puncture lesions were inspected post‐mortem. Results: Transseptal puncture was successful in 17/18 horses, of which 15/16 jugular vein approaches and 5/8 transhepatic approaches. Failure was due to technical malfunction, inability to advance the guidewire toward the heart and inability to advance the sheath through the FO. Intracardiac echocardiography was essential to safely guide the puncture process. Atrial arrhythmias caused by the TSP occurred in 13/18 horses. Puncture lesions were found in the right atrium in the FO region, and left atrium ventral to pulmonary vein ostium III. Main limitations: Because in several horses two approaches were tested consecutively, it cannot be excluded that the second TSP was performed at the previous puncture site. Due to the developmental nature of the study the approaches were not randomised and did not allow comparison. Conclusion: Transseptal puncture is feasible in horses using ultrasound guidance and allows for electrophysiological exploration of the left heart. Further studies are needed to evaluate post‐operative follow‐up.}},
author = {{Vernemmen, Ingrid and Van Steenkiste, Glenn and Buschmann, Eva and Cornelis, Kristoff and Schauvliege, Stijn and Ibrahim, Lara and Decloedt, Annelies and van Loon, Gunther}},
issn = {{0425-1644}},
journal = {{EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL}},
keywords = {{General Medicine,ablation,horse,interventional cardiology,intracardiac echocardiography,left heart catheterisation,mapping,zero-fluoroscopy}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{1}},
pages = {{243--255}},
title = {{Development of an atrial transseptal puncture procedure in horses to access the left heart : an ultrasound‐guided jugular vein and transhepatic approach}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.1111/evj.14084}},
volume = {{57}},
year = {{2025}},
}
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