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Correlative Anatomy for the Electrophysiologist, Part II: Cardiac Ganglia, Phrenic Nerve, Coronary Venous System

Journal

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 104-110

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-8167.2010.01882.x

Keywords

pericardial space; arrhythmia; ablation; cardiac ganglia; coronary venous system; phrenic nerve

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Cardiac Ganglia, Phrenic Nerve, Coronary Venous System. There is an increasing need for invasive electrophysiologists to appreciate the exact anatomy of the epicardial space and the coronary veins. The location of the epicardial fat, the complementary relationship with the main cardiac veins, and the location of sensitive structures (arteries, phrenic nerve, esophagus) have become required knowledge for electrophysiologists, and accessing the epicardial space with this thorough knowledge of the pericardial sinuses and recesses is essential to allow radiographic correlation during catheter manipulation. In this review, we briefly describe the anatomy of the pericardial space and then discuss the specific correlation for the invasive electrophysiologist, highlighting epicardial access, catheter navigation, and avoidance of collateral injury, with specific attention to the important recesses of the pericardial space, their regional anatomy, and radiographic correlation when navigating catheters to these locations. We also discuss the anatomy of the main cardiac veins in the context of catheter mapping and ablation of the epicardial substrate through the venous system and without subxiphoid pericardial access. In part II of this series we discuss the detailed regional anatomy of the cardiac ganglia, phrenic nerve, and coronary venous system. (J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol, Vol. 22, pp. 104-110, January 2011).

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