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@bettycll

Like you, my AFib is persistent and I also have a pacemaker. The anti-arrhythmia drug I was prescribed was Amiodarone. That was toxic to my lungs, and I have permanent scarring. Since then I have been on Sotalol, Flecainide, and am now on Propafenone. I am still in AFib. They want to do an ablation, but I know so many people that had to have more than one. I am not sure what to do.

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Replies to "Like you, my AFib is persistent and I also have a pacemaker. The anti-arrhythmia drug I..."

About 75% of all index ablations (first attempts) are successful. So, about 25% fail. However, the re-dos typically run about 85% successful, so an improvement. I had to have two, seven months apart. Typically, the lesions caused during the first attempt don't let any spurious signal through and the EP team feels you have been completely isolated, so no more AF. Then, six, twelve weeks later, you break into AF one day, or a lot of PACs, and it becomes clear then that the team didn't manage to completely close off the focus (which in about 90% of all initial cases is at the pulmonary vein ostia...the mouths). A second attempt has a higher success rate.
An ablation is not to be feared. It's not very uncomfortable, usually, although everyone experiences it and the aftereffects differently. Most feel very well within a couple of days to a week and then they realize they have their life back! I know several people who have had three, four, five, even six ablations. The idea is to give your first EP another chance, but then you should be looking further afield for a better, or more experienced one. Like chefs, artists, dancers, and fishermen, some are better than others.

Betty, what they're proposing for me is not the ablation that goes up
through the groin to the heart and makes burns around the chamber. Sure not
their words but mine. The ablate part of my pacemaker insertion is a
different type. There's a node in the middle of the 4 chambers that they
interrupt. I'll read that paperwork and let you know. Cheers Annette