Alexander Pott
University of Ulm
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Featured researches published by Alexander Pott.
Journal of Cardiology | 2017
Alexander Pott; Marvin Messemer; Kerstin Petscher; Mario Iturbe-Orbe; Carlo Bothner; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Tillman Dahme
BACKGROUND Pulmonary vein isolation is an established therapy for symptomatic atrial fibrillation. Despite the fact that incidence and prevalence of atrial fibrillation increases with age, patients over 75 years of age have been excluded in all major atrial fibrillation ablation trials. Pulmonary vein isolation with the cryoballoon has been shown to be equally effective compared to irrigated radiofrequency catheter ablation, but patients over 75 years have also been excluded. The 2nd generation cryoballoon has shown superior efficacy compared to the 1st generation cryoballoon. The aim of the study was to assess the efficacy of pulmonary vein isolation with the 2nd generation cryoballoon for symptomatic atrial fibrillation in elderly patients over 75 years. METHODS Patients over 75 years of age presenting with symptomatic paroxysmal or persistent atrial fibrillation refractory or intolerant to at least one class I or class III antiarrhythmic drug who underwent pulmonary vein isolation with the 2nd generation cryoballoon were included in this single-center observational study. RESULTS A total of 40 patients with a mean age of 78.3±2.7 years with paroxysmal (n=31; 77.5%) or persistent (n=9; 22.5%) atrial fibrillation were identified. All patients had a successful pulmonary vein isolation procedure with 100% of veins isolated. After a 3-month blanking period during a mean follow-up of 15.1±8.2 months there were 9 (22.5%) arrhythmia recurrences, while 31 patients (77.5%) maintained stable sinus rhythm. Freedom from arrhythmia recurrence was 86.4% at 12 months and 80.2% at 24 months. CONCLUSIONS Pulmonary vein isolation with the 2nd generation cryoballoon appears to be an effective treatment for symptomatic atrial fibrillation also in patients over 75 years of age.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2018
Alexander Pott; Christoph Kraft; Tilman Stephan; Kerstin Petscher; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Tillman Dahme
BACKGROUND The optimal freeze duration in cryoballoon pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is unknown. The 3rd generation cryoballoon facilitates observation of the time-to-isolation (TTI) and thereby enables individualized cryoenergy titration. To evaluate the efficacy of an individualized freeze duration we compared the clinical outcome of patients treated with a TTI-guided ablation protocol to the outcome of patients treated with a fixed ablation protocol. METHODS We compared 100 patients treated with the 3rd generation cryoballoon applying a TTI-based protocol (TTI group) to 100 patients treated by a fixed freeze protocol (fixed group). In the fixed group a 240s freeze cycle was followed by a 240s bonus freeze after acute PV isolation. In the TTI group freeze duration was 180s if TTI was ≥30s and reduced to only 120s, if TTI was <30s. In case of a TTI >60s a 180s bonus freeze was applied. RESULTS Freedom from atrial arrhythmia recurrence off class I/III antiarrhythmic drugs after one year was not different between the TTI group (73.6%) and the fixed group (75.7%; p=0.75). Mean procedure duration was 85.8±27.3min in the TTI group compared to 115.7±27.1min in the fixed group (p<0.001). Mean fluoroscopy time was 17.5±6.6min in the TTI group and 22.5±9.8min in the fixed group (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS TTI-guided cryoenergy titration leads to reduced procedure duration and fluoroscopy time and appears to be as effective as a fixed ablation strategy. A single 2-minute freeze seems to be sufficient in case of short TTI.
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2018
Alexander Pott; Sarah Bock; Ina M. Berger; Karen Frese; Tillman Dahme; Mirjam Keßler; Susanne Rinné; Niels Decher; Steffen Just; Wolfgang Rottbauer
The genetic underpinnings that orchestrate the vertebrate heart rate are not fully understood yet, but of high clinical importance, since diseases of cardiac impulse formation and propagation are common and severe human arrhythmias. To identify novel regulators of the vertebrate heart rate, we deciphered the pathogenesis of the bradycardia in the homozygous zebrafish mutant hiphop (hip) and identified a missense-mutation (N851K) in Na+/K+-ATPase α1-subunit (atp1a1a.1). N851K affects zebrafish Na+/K+-ATPase ion transport capacity, as revealed by in vitro pump current measurements. Inhibition of the Na+/K+-ATPase in vivo indicates that hip rather acts as a hypomorph than being a null allele. Consequently, reduced Na+/K+-ATPase function leads to prolonged QT interval and refractoriness in the hip mutant heart, as shown by electrocardiogram and in vivo electrical stimulation experiments. We here demonstrate for the first time that Na+/K+-ATPase plays an essential role in heart rate regulation by prolonging myocardial repolarization.
Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology | 2016
Alexander Pott; Kerstin Petscher; Marvin Messemer; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Tillman Dahme
Heart and Vessels | 2018
Alexander Pott; Kerstin Petscher; Michael Baumhardt; Tilman Stephan; Manuel Rattka; Rima Paliskyte; Carlo Bothner; Mirjam Keßler; Wolfgang Rottbauer
Europace | 2018
Alexander Pott; M Baumhardt; T Stefan; Kerstin Petscher; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Tillman Dahme
Europace | 2018
Alexander Pott; P Rapierski; M Baumhardt; Kerstin Petscher; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Tillman Dahme
Europace | 2018
Alexander Pott; C. Kraft; M Baumhardt; Kerstin Petscher; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Tillman Dahme
Europace | 2018
Alexander Pott; M Baumhardt; T Stefan; Kerstin Petscher; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Tillman Dahme
Europace | 2017
Tillman Dahme; C. Kraft; Tilman Stephan; M Baumhardt; Kerstin Petscher; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Alexander Pott