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Richard Harvey, M.D. Interventional Cardiologist at GMC/Gwinnett Medical Group Board Certified as a Surgeon Specialty: Congenital Cardiac Surgery (Thoracic Surgery) Diplomat of the American Board of Thoracic Surgery, as well as a member of the American College of Surgeons, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons and the Alpha Omega Alpha honor medical Residency- Cardiac University of Mississippi Residency- Surgery Mercer University School of Medicine Medical School: University of Mississippi School of Medicine
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Page 1: Dr. Harvey

Richard Harvey, M.D.

• Interventional Cardiologist at GMC/Gwinnett Medical Group

• Board Certified as a Surgeon• Specialty: Congenital Cardiac

Surgery (Thoracic Surgery)• Diplomat of the American Board

of Thoracic Surgery, as well as a member of the American College of Surgeons, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons and the Alpha Omega Alpha honor medical society

Residency-CardiacUniversity of Mississippi

Residency- SurgeryMercer University School

of Medicine

Medical School:University of Mississippi School of

Medicine

Page 2: Dr. Harvey

Richard L. Harvey, MD

Gwinnett Medical Group

HYBRID APPROACH TO AFIB

Page 3: Dr. Harvey

QUESTION # 1 - 3

• Where was the first successful corrective therapy for a cardiac arryhthmia performed?

• Who performed this procedure?

• Where is this person from?

Page 4: Dr. Harvey

FATHER OF ARRHYTHMIA SURGERY

Page 5: Dr. Harvey

WILL C. SEALY, MD

• Chairman of Cardiothoracic Surgery at Duke University

• WPW Syndrome

• Ivan Brown, PhD

• May 2, 1968

• On Cardio-pulmonary Bypass

• Cut and Sew Lesion

• Off-pump efforts had failed at Mayo earlier

• Spent the last 10 years of career at Mercer

Page 6: Dr. Harvey

QUESTION # 4 - 6

• Where was the first successful corrective therapy for Afib performed?

• Who performed this procedure?

• What was it called?

Page 7: Dr. Harvey

INTRODUCED THE MAZE PROCEDURE

Page 8: Dr. Harvey

JAMES L. COX, MD

• Followed Dr. Sealy at Duke

• Multiple failed efforts with mapping

• Developed MAZE due to ineffective mapping

• Performed fully open with CPB

• Cut and Sew Technique

• Poorly Adopted due to Complexity

Page 9: Dr. Harvey

MOVEMENT AWAY FROM SURGERY

• Procedures were to complex/invasive

• Catheter Skills/Technology continued to improve

• Large Office-Based Component to Patient Care

• Electrophysiology developed as a discipline of Cardiology

Page 10: Dr. Harvey

SURGERY AND THE MITRAL VALVE• Late 1990s and MV Surgery

• Symptoms and strong association with Afib

• Open techniques returned

• Multiple devices were introduced—simplicity

• Cryo

• Radiofrequency

• Monopolar

• Bipolar

• Ultrasound

• Cut and Sew MAZE was still considered too much

Page 11: Dr. Harvey

REMAINED SEPERATE FROM EP

• No Multi-disciplined approach

• Academic Centers resurgence in research

• Ongoing Debate about Efficacy

• Very poor Trust in Data

Page 12: Dr. Harvey

THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI MEDICAL CENTER

June 11,1963

Martin L. Dalton, MD

James D. Hardy, MD

Norman E. Shumway, MD

Medgar Evers

Page 13: Dr. Harvey

NEW TECHNOLOGY HAS CREATED CHANGE

• Muliple new Therapies has changed approach

• Require multi-disciplinary Team Approach

• Require medical specialties and surgical specialties to work together as a team

• Places that cannot do this fail

• TAVR

• Destination LVAD

Page 14: Dr. Harvey

ARRHYTHMIA CENTERS AT ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS

• Complexity of Disease

• Minimally invasive techniques Improved

• Recognition of Limitations of Catheter Therapies

• Surgical Patients

• Persistent Afib

• Long-Standing Persistent Afib

• Failed Catheter Paroxysmal Patients

• Enlarged Left Atrium

• Cleveland Clinic

• Northwestern University

• Vanderbilt University

• Washington University

Page 15: Dr. Harvey

DEVICE COMPANIES

• Responded to the Increased Interest

• Less Invasive Methods

• Mimic MAZE Procedure

• Deal with the Left Atrial Appendage• Concomitant FDA Approval

Page 16: Dr. Harvey

University of Mississippi

Page 17: Dr. Harvey

AFIB: THE HYBRID APPROACH• Surgeons and EP working together

• Can’t speak for EP

• Sugeons:

• Not Electrophysiologists, we are Anatomists

• Are not equipped to treat medically

• Not Office-based

• Not Medicine pushers

• Can get to anatomical areas of the heart that are difficult with a catheter

• Without Back-up

Page 18: Dr. Harvey

AFIB: THE HYBRID APPROACH• Simultaneous or Sequential Procedures

• Part done by the Surgeon

• Part done by an Electrophysiologist

• Patient Selection = Algorithm/Symptomatic

• Persistent Afib

• Large Left Atrium

• Thrombus in LAA

• Failed Catheter Ablations

Page 19: Dr. Harvey

QUESTIONS # 7 – 9

• A patient in Afib for 10 years undergoes Cardiac Surgery requiring CPB, what will his/her rhythm be when seperating from CPB?

• On POD #3, patient goes into Afib who has never had this prior to surgery, what is the cause?

• A Patient undergoes a MAZE procedure with a Mitral Valve Repair, what are their chances of going back into afib post-op? When is the ablation considered a failure?

Page 20: Dr. Harvey

University of Mississippi School of Medicine

Page 21: Dr. Harvey

SURGICAL DEVICES: PROS & CONS

Page 22: Dr. Harvey

ESTECH COBRA

Page 23: Dr. Harvey

ESTECH COBRA

• Unilateral Thoracoscopy

• Doesn’t Require CPB

• Creates only Box Lesion

• Mostly used with Concomitant AVR

• Requires:

• No history of Thoracotomy

• Adequate Lung Function

• Usually Staged Procedures

Page 24: Dr. Harvey

ATRICURE

Page 25: Dr. Harvey

ATRICURE

• Most closely mimics MAZE

• Allows closure of LAA

• Allows Immediate testing for block

• Requires Bilateral Thoracoscopy

• No history of Thoracotomy

• Adequate Lung Function

• Only device with FDA Approval for Afib

Page 26: Dr. Harvey

NCONTACT

Page 27: Dr. Harvey

NCONTACT

• Called Convergent Procedure

• Requires both Surgical and EP Procedure

• Transabdominal via Diaphragm

• Simplest of the Surgical Side of the Options

• Previous Upper Abdominal Surgery is a Contraindication

• Does not address the LAA

Page 28: Dr. Harvey

ANY QUESTIONS?