Description
The study is a a prospective, observational cohort study. 50 patients undergoing cardiac surgery (Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG), valvular etc.) without a history of atrial fibrillation will be given a baseline Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) upon which patients will be assigned Utah stages I-IV based on their left atrial fibrosis pattern. Overall fibrosis (%) of the left atrial wall area will also be collected. Patients will then undergo their planned surgeries receiving management adherent to current guidelines and standard of care procedures. Atrial arrhythmia incidence after surgical procedure will be collected using in-hospital telemetry or serial Electrocardiogram (ECG) from all patients in their respective cohorts. Cardiac surgery type, duration and any intraoperative complications will be recorded. Other clinical and relevant demographical data will be collected at admission and throughout patients’ hospital stay.
All cardiac surgeries will be performed by experienced surgeons at Tulane Medical Center, Washington University Medical Center Barnes Jewish Hospital, and University Medical Center New Orleans, adhering to all relevant standard-of-care guidelines. MRI imaging will be performed by experienced technicians and operators at Tulane Medical Center, Washington University Medical Center Barnes Jewish Hospital, and University Medical Center New Orleans. MRI Utah fibrosis staging will be performed and assessed by experienced operators at MARREK, Inc., by using the Corview processing software with de-identified images.
The investigators expect a total recruitment of 50 subjects over a period of 6 months from the Tulane Medical Center Cardiology and Cardiothoracic Surgery Clinics, Washington University Medical Center Barnes Jewish Hospital Cardiology and Cardiothoracic Surgery Clinics, as well as University Medical Center New Orleans Cardiology and Cardiothoracic Surgery Clinics in order to complete the study. They expect to recruit 40 patients from Washington University Medical Center and 10 patients from either Tulane Medical Center or University Medical Center New Orleans.