Video Shows Alternative Treatment for Atrial Fibrillation

Katherine Scott

In the United States alone, approximately 6 million people suffer from an irregular heartbeat known as atrial fibrillation (AF), and since the incidence increases with age, it is predicted that 15.9 million Americans will be affected by 2050. The most devastating side effect of AF is stroke, but a new device from Boston Scientific may prevent them from occurring.

Researchers from Atritech, now part of Boston Scientific, developed the WATCHMAN device — a small mesh umbrella that can be inserted into part of the heart cavity to prevent the formation of blood clots that cause strokes.

Currently, the anti-coagulant drug Warfarin is used to prevent strokes, but the drug comes with other risks.

“Warfarin has a lot of side-effects. One major side-effect is the bleeding risk,” said paper-author Dr. Sven Mobius-Winkler. “Therefore, only 50 percent of the patients who should take Warfarin actually take it.”

The WATCHMAN device gives patients another option. It has already been approved for use in the European Union and Australia, and secured investigational approval from the FDA in 2009.

To help train doctors how to use the device, physicians from the University of Leipzig Heart Center in Germany have published the full WATCHMAN placement procedure in JoVE.

“Intervention and closure of the left atrial appendage is a complex procedure,” said Dr. Mobius-Winkler. “For inexperienced physicians, it is hard to learn this procedure and therefore the video can help by doing the step-by-step implantation.”

To see the full procedure, please click here.