In the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF), catheter ablation has developed from a specialized option to the mainstay of a modern rhythm strategy within a decade. In 2025, two developments are shaping the debate: on the one hand, the updated guidelines increasingly anchor ablation as a first-line therapy – for suitable indications – and on the other hand, pulsed-field ablation (PFA) is technically and conceptually challenging the previously dominant thermal procedures – in particular radiofrequency ablation (RF) using the high-power short-duration (HPSD) technique. Randomized studies, registries and safety analyses provide a differentiated picture: PFA is not inferior to conventional thermal ablation in paroxysmal AF, shows procedural advantages and a special safety profile, but brings with it new, characteristic side effects. RF ablation, for its part, has achieved significant efficiency and safety gains with HPSD and optimized workflow standards.
Autoren
- Tanja Schliebe
Publikation
- CARDIOVASC
Related Topics
You May Also Like
- Abdominal aortic aneurysms in primary care
Risk-stratified screening and prophylaxis
- Plastic surgery and reconstructive microsurgery for DFS
Functional limb preservation between infection control, vascular medicine and resurfacing
- Cardiology
Minimally invasive – the quiet triumph of modern heart surgery
- Age-related neurocognitive disorders
Neuroprotective effects of Ginkgo biloba extract
How origin and place of residence promote CF-associated diabetes
- Patients with leg swelling
DVT and other common DDs with peripheral edema
- "smarter medicine": Top 5 list for headache treatment
Recommendations of the Swiss Headache Society
- Pancreatic Cancer