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Dive into the research topics where Gaetano Paparella is active.

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Featured researches published by Gaetano Paparella.


Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2009

Inferior and Lateral Electrocardiographic Repolarization Abnormalities in Brugada Syndrome

Andrea Sarkozy; Gian-Battista Chierchia; Gaetano Paparella; Tim Boussy; Carlo de Asmundis; Marcus Roos; Stefan Henkens; Leonard Kaufman; Ronald Buyl; Ramon Brugada; Josep Brugada; Pedro Brugada

Background—Repolarization abnormalities in the inferior-lateral leads in Brugada syndrome (BS) have not been systematically investigated. Methods and Results—280 patients (age, 41±18 years; 168 males) with BS were screened for inferior-lateral repolarization abnormalities. The repolarization abnormalities were classified either as early repolarization pattern or coved ≥2-mm Brugada pattern and as spontaneous or class I antiarrhythmic drug (AAD) induced. Thirty-two patients (11%) had inferior-lateral spontaneous early repolarization pattern. These patients were less likely to be asymptomatic at first presentation (13 of 32 versus 156 of 248 patients, P=0.02), and spontaneous type I ECG was more frequent among them (38% versus 21%, P=0.05). The spontaneous early repolarization pattern occurred more frequently among patients with BS than in 283 family members not having BS (11% versus 6%, P=0.03). Class I AAD administration provoked inferior-lateral coved Brugada pattern in 13 patients with BS. These patients had longer baseline PR intervals (206±48 versus 172±31 ms, P<0.001) and class I AAD–induced QRS interval prolongation (108 to 178 versus 102 ms to 131 ms, P<0.001). In 3 patients, the class I AAD–provoked coved Brugada pattern was only present in the inferior leads. Conclusions—Inferior-lateral early repolarization pattern occurs spontaneously relatively frequently in BS. These patients have a more severe phenotype. Class I AAD administration provokes inferior-lateral coved Brugada pattern in 4.6% of patients. We report for the first time 3 patients in whom the class I AAD–provoked coved Brugada pattern was only observed in the inferior leads.


Europace | 2014

Second-generation cryoballoon ablation for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: 1-year follow-up.

Gian-Battista Chierchia; Giacomo Di Giovanni; Giuseppe Ciconte; Carlo de Asmundis; Giulio Conte; Juan Sieira-Moret; Moisés Rodríguez-Mañero; Ruben Casado; Giannis Baltogiannis; Mehdi Namdar; Yukio Saitoh; Gaetano Paparella; Giacomo Mugnai; Pedro Brugada

BACKGROUND The novel cryoballoon Advance (CB-A) has proven to achieve significantly lower temperatures and faster pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) times in comparison with the first-generation device. Although acutely very effective, to the best of our knowledge, data on mid-term clinical follow-up is lacking. AIMS The aim of the study was to analyse the freedom from recurrence of atrial fibrillation (AF) on a 1-year follow-up period, in a series of consecutive patients having undergone PVI with the CB-A for paroxysmal AF (PAF). METHODS AND RESULTS Forty-two patients [30 male (71%); mean age: 57.9 ± 21.1 years] were included. All patients underwent a procedure with the large 28 mm CB-A. A total 168 PVs were depicted on the pre-procedural computed tomography scan. All PVs (100%) could be isolated with the CB only. The freedom from AF off-antiarrhythmic drug treatment after a single procedure was 78% of patients at a mean 11.6 ± 2.0 months follow-up. If considering a blanking period (BP) of 3 months, success rate was 83%. Phrenic nerve palsy (PNP) was the most frequent complication occurring in 19% of individuals. CONCLUSION The CB-A is very effective in producing PVI and affords freedom from AF at 12 months follow-up in 83% of patients affected by drug-resistant PAF following a 3-month BP. The most frequent complication observed was PNP which occurred in 19% of patients. All PNP reverted during follow-up.


European Heart Journal | 2011

The value of a family history of sudden death in patients with diagnostic type I Brugada ECG pattern

Andrea Sarkozy; Antonio Sorgente; Tim Boussy; Ruben Casado; Gaetano Paparella; Lucio Capulzini; Gian-Battista Chierchia; Yoshinao Yazaki; Carlo de Asmundis; Danny Coomans; Josep Brugada; Pedro Brugada

AIMS We sought to investigate the value of a family history of sudden death (SD) in Brugada syndrome (BS). METHODS AND RESULTS Two hundred and eighty consecutive patients (mean age: 41 ± 18 years, 168 males) with diagnostic type I Brugada ECG pattern were included. Sudden death occurred in 69 (43%) of 157 families. One hundred and ten SDs were analysed. During follow-up VF (ventricular fibrillation) or SD-free survival rate was not different between patients with or without a family history of SD of a first-degree relative, between patients with or without a family history of multiple SD of a first-degree relative at any age and between patients with or without a family history of SD in first-degree relatives ≤35 years. One patient had family history of SD of two first-degree relative ≤35 years with arrhythmic event during follow-up. In univariate analysis male gender (P = 0.01), aborted SD (P < 0.001), syncope (P = 0.04), spontaneous type I ECG (P < 0.001), and inducibility during electrophysiological (EP) study (P < 0.001) were associated with worse prognosis. The absence of syncope, aborted SD, spontaneous type I ECG, and inducibility during EP study was associated with a significantly better prognosis (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION Family history of SD is not predictive for future arrhythmic events even if considering only SD in first-degree relatives or SD in first-degree relatives at a young age. The absence of syncope, aborted SD, spontaneous type I ECG, and inducibility during EP study is associated with a good five-year prognosis.


Europace | 2008

Early recovery of pulmonary vein conduction after cryoballoon ablation for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: a prospective study

Gian-Battista Chierchia; Carlo de Asmundis; Stephan-Andreas Müller-Burri; Andrea Sarkozy; Lucio Capulzini; Gaetano Paparella; Sergio Chierchia; Markus Roos; Pedro Brugada

AIMS To assess the incidence of early pulmonary vein (PV) reconnection, characterize the anatomic features of the reconducting veins, and analyse the time course of their recovery in a series of consecutive patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) undergoing ablation with the Arctic Front Cryoballoon. METHODS AND RESULTS We prospectively enrolled 26 patients (20 males; age 55.4 +/- 4.1) for circumferential PV cryoballoon isolation for highly symptomatic paroxysmal AF. Following isolation of all veins, we analysed PV potentials in each vein after 30 and 60 min with a circular mapping catheter. After successful electrical isolation of all 104 PVs, recurrence was observed only in three veins (2.8%) after 30 min. Two further cryoballoon applications in each of these veins lead to their isolation. These veins were still electrically disconnected at 60 min. No PV reconnection was observed in any of the other 101 veins (97.1%) at 30 and 60 min. CONCLUSION Cryoballoon ablation of the PVs ostia is a very effective technique to achieve electrical isolation, with a very low rate of early reconnection.


Europace | 2010

Pericardial effusion in atrial fibrillation ablation: a comparison between cryoballoon and radiofrequency pulmonary vein isolation

Gian-Battista Chierchia; Lucio Capulzini; Steven Droogmans; Antonio Sorgente; Andrea Sarkozy; A. Muller-Burri; Gaetano Paparella; de Asmundis Carlo; Yoshinao Yazaki; Dirk Kerkhove; Guy Van Camp; Pedro Brugada

AIMS Atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation is increasingly being performed in electrophysiology laboratories. Pericardial effusion (PE) is certainly one of the most frequently observed complications during AF ablation. The aim of our study was to investigate the incidence and outcome of PE following cryothermal energy balloon ablation (CBA) in comparison with conventional circumferential pulmonary vein isolation with a focal radiofrequency (RF) catheter. METHODS AND RESULTS A total of 133 consecutive patients (105 males) with paroxysmal AF were included in this study. Forty-six patients (36 males) underwent CBA (Arctic Front, Medtronic, USA) and 87 (69 males) point-by-point RF ablation guided by electroanatomical mapping (Carto, Biosense Webster, Diamond Bar, CA, USA). Ablation was performed under general anaesthesia with both techniques. All patients underwent a 2D transthoracic echocardiogram within 24 h before and after the procedure as routinely performed in our centre. Pericardial effusion was detected in 19 (14.2%) of 133 patients. Sixteen patients presented mild effusion, one moderate effusion, and two pericardial tamponades. There was no significant difference in the incidence of PE between the cryoballoon and the RF group (11 vs. 16%). A longer procedural time, coronary artery disease, and arterial hypertension were found to be independent predictors of PE during AF ablation. CONCLUSION Pericardial effusion occurred in a similar proportion following CBA and RF ablation for AF. Pericardial effusion was mostly mild and asymptomatic, with benign clinical outcome not requiring additional hospitalization days.


Europace | 2010

Feasibility, safety, and outcome of a challenging transseptal puncture facilitated by radiofrequency energy delivery: a prospective single-centre study.

Lucio Capulzini; Gaetano Paparella; Antonio Sorgente; C. de Asmundis; G.B. Chierchia; Andrea Sarkozy; A. Muller-Burri; Yoshinao Yazaki; Markus Roos; Pedro Brugada

AIMS Although it has been shown that a transseptal (TS) puncture in the electrophysiology laboratory is associated with a high success and a low complication rate, this procedure remains challenging particularly in difficult septum anatomies (aneurismal septum and thick septum) and during repeat TS catheterization. Radiofrequency (RF) electrocautery current delivery through the TS needle has been shown to facilitate the TS puncture. The aim of this study was to verify prospectively the feasibility, safety, and outcome of RF energy delivery associated with the standard TS technique in patients undergoing a challenging TS puncture. METHODS AND RESULTS Over a 14-month period, 162 consecutive patients underwent left atrial (LA) arrhythmia ablation in our centre. Among them, we enrolled 18 patients who failed LA access after two TS puncture attempts. In these patients, an RF delivery through TS (RF-TS) needle approach was used to reach the LA. All 18 patients had a successful RF-TS at the first attempt. A transoesophageal echocardiography (TEE) guidance and fluoroscopy views were used in all patients. No acute complications were reported. There have been no clinical sequelae after 10 +/- 4 months of follow-up following the RF-TS approach. Challenging TS punctures were more frequent in repeat LA catheterization when compared with the first LA catheterization, respectively, in 35% (13 of 37) and 4% (5 of 125) of the patients. CONCLUSION Radiofrequency electrocautery delivery associated with the standard TS approach is a safe and reproducible technique to reach the left atrium, using the TEE guidance. This technique is helpful during repeat TS catheterization and in the presence of anatomical atrial septum abnormalities.


Europace | 2016

Phrenic nerve injury during ablation with the second-generation cryoballoon: analysis of the temperature drop behaviour in a large cohort of patients

Giacomo Mugnai; Carlo de Asmundis; Vedran Velagic; Burak Hünük; Erwin Ströker; Kristel Wauters; Ghazala Irfan; Ingrid Overeinder; Ebru Hacioglu; Jaime Hernandez-Ojeda; Jan Poelaert; Christian Verborgh; Gaetano Paparella; Pedro Brugada; Gian-Battista Chierchia

AIMS The present study sought to analyse the relationship between the temperature drop during the cryoenergy application and the occurrence of phrenic nerve injury (PNI) in a large cohort of patients having undergone second-generation cryoballoon ablation (CB-A). METHODS AND RESULTS The first 550 consecutive patients having undergone CB-A for atrial fibrillation were enrolled. Attained temperatures at 20, 30, 40, and 60 s during cryoablation in the right-sided pulmonary veins (PVs) were collected. Diagnosis of PNI was made if reduced motility or paralysis of the hemidiaphragm was detected. The incidence of PNI in the study population was 7.3% (40/550); among them, only four (0.7%) did not resolve until discharge and one (0.2%) still persisted at 23 months. Patients with PNI exhibited significantly lower temperatures at 20, 30, and 40 s after the beginning of the cryoapplication in the right superior PV (RSPV) (P = 0.006, P = 0.003, and P = 0.003, respectively). The temperature drop expressed as Δ temperature/Δ time was also significantly higher in patients with PNI. Low temperature during the early phases of the freezing cycle (less than -38°C at 40 s) predicted PNI with a sensitivity of 80.5%, a specificity of 77%, and a negative predictive value of 97.9%. Among patients with a fast temperature drop during RSPV ablation, an RSPV diameter >23.55 × 17.95 mm significantly predicted PNI occurrence. CONCLUSION The analysis of the temperature course within the first 40 s after the initiation of the freezing cycle showed that the temperature dropped significantly faster in patients with PNI during ablation in the RSPV.


Heart Rhythm | 2017

Second-generation cryoballoon ablation without the use of real-time recordings: A novel strategy based on a temperature-guided approach to ablation

Saverio Iacopino; Giacomo Mugnai; Ken Takarada; Gaetano Paparella; Erwin Ströker; Valentina De Regibus; Hugo Enrique Coutino-Moreno; Rajin Choudhury; Juan Pablo Abugattas de Torres; Pedro Brugada; Carlo de Asmundis; Gian-Battista Chierchia

BACKGROUND The achievement of -40°C within the first 60 seconds during cryoenergy applications has proven to independently predict durable pulmonary vein (PV) isolation in the setting of second-generation cryoballoon (CB-A; Medtronic, Minneapolis, MN) ablation. OBJECTIVE We sought to evaluate a strategy based on the attainment of the specific parameter of -40°C within the first 60 seconds during cryoenergy applications in the setting of CB-A ablation without the use of an inner lumen mapping catheter (Achieve, Medtronic) for the visualization of real-time recordings. METHODS A total of 52 patients having undergone CB ablation for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) between 1 February 2015 and 30 June 2015 who underwent a temperature-guided approach based on achieving -40°C within 60 seconds without real-time recordings (wire group) were compared with a cohort of 52 propensity score-matched patients having undergone CB ablation performed with an inner lumen mapping catheter (Achieve group). All PVs were checked for electrical isolation at the end of the procedure with a circular mapping catheter in the wire group. RESULTS Electrical isolation could be obtained in all patients in the Achieve group and in 99% of PVs in the wire group. Freedom from AF without antiarrhythmic drugs at a mean follow-up of 12.4 ± 3.0 months did not significantly differ between both groups (85% vs 88%, respectively; P = .56). CONCLUSION A temperature-guided approach based on achieving -40°C within 60 seconds is effective in producing PV isolation and affords freedom from AF at 12-month follow-up in 85% of patients affected by paroxysmal AF after a 3-month blanking period.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

The usefulness of the consensus clinical diagnostic criteria in Brugada syndrome

Andrea Sarkozy; Gaetano Paparella; Tim Boussy; Ruben Casado-Arroyo; Yoshinao Yazaki; Gian-Battista Chierchia; Carlo de Asmundis; Fatih Bayrak; Mehdi Namdar; Sergio Richter; Josep Brugada; Pedro Brugada

BACKGROUND Consensus statements were proposed for the diagnosis of Brugada syndrome (BS). The clinical diagnostic criteria were defined as documented ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia (VT), family history of sudden cardiac death at <45 years, diagnostic ECGs of family members, inducibility of VT during electrophysiological study, syncope or nocturnal agonal respiration. The clinical validation of these criteria is still missing. Methods and results 280 patients (41 ± 18 years, male: 168 pts) with diagnostic coved type I ECG were included. Consensus clinical diagnostic criteria were present in 244 (87%) patients (40 ± 18 y, 142 males). In 36 pts (13% of the 280 pts, 51 ± 12 years, 27 males) consensus clinical diagnostic criteria were not met. Nine patients (25%) presented with spontaneous type I ECG. Ten of the 36 patients (28%) had a history of atrial fibrillation and 13 (36%) had conduction disease on the baseline ECG. In 23 patients (64%) family screening was not performed. Two of the 36 patients had undocumented syncope during follow-up. Univariate analysis showed no significant difference in event free survival between patients with or without consensus clinical diagnostic criteria. CONCLUSIONS In a significant number of patients with diagnostic ECG pattern the current diagnostic criteria for BS are not met. These patients have frequently spontaneous type I ECG and clinical signs of Brugada syndrome as paroxysmal atrial fibrillation or conduction disturbances. Our results suggest that in patients with a diagnostic type I ECG pattern the current clinical consensus diagnostic criteria have limited added diagnostic value.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2014

Cryoballoon ablation as index procedure for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: long-term results from a single center early experience.

Jayakeerthi Y. Rao; Gian-Battista Chierchia; Carlo de Asmundis; Ruben Casado-Arroyo; Ingrid Overeinder; Andrea Sarkozy; Gaetano Paparella; Lucio Capulzini; Antonio Sorgente; Moisés Rodríguez-Mañero; Danilo Ricciardi; Mehdi Namdar; Pedro Brugada

Aims Cryoballoon ablation (CRAB) as a modality for pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is increasingly being accepted. We aim to study the long-term durability of CRAB in atrial fibrillation. Methods The first 51 consecutive patients with documented paroxysmal atrial fibrillation(PAF) who underwent CRAB at our institute were considered. Forty patients formed the study group. Successful PVI was achieved in all the patients. Patients were evaluated with Holter ECG recordings at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months and subsequent follow-up was biannual and based on the clinical status and physician discretion whether symptoms occurred. For the study purpose, a baseline ECG, a 24-h Holter and clinical evaluation were performed in all patients at final follow-up. Results A large 28-mm cryoballoon (CB) was used in 38 patients (95%), and the small 23-mm CB in the remaining two individuals (2%). The freedom from atrial fibrillation off-antiarrhythmic drug treatment (AAD) after a single procedure at a mean follow-up of 36.6 ± 4 months was 57.5% (23/40). Transient right phrenic nerve palsy was the most common complication. Conclusion Single balloon size CRAB provides a durable atrial fibrillation-free–AAD-free survival in drug-resistant PAF patients over long-term follow-up with a success rate of 57.5% with a single procedure.

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Dive into the Gaetano Paparella's collaboration.

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Carlo de Asmundis

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Pedro Brugada

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Andrea Sarkozy

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Lucio Capulzini

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Erwin Ströker

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Giacomo Mugnai

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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