Septal ablation
During a septal ablation procedure, cardiologists use an ethanol injection to reduce the size of heart muscle cells in patients who have a specific heart disorder known as hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. The goal of this experimental treatment is to decrease thickened muscle that divides the heart's two chambers so that it can retract, restoring normal blood flow.
Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy can cause sudden death if the heart beats abnormally or if a patient becomes unconscious because blood is unable to exit the heart properly. With this disease, the septum of the heart slowly chokes off the blood supply to the body. As blood enters the left ventricle to be pumped out to all parts of the body and as the heart squeezes, the enlarged muscle gets in the way so blood cannot exit the heart by passing through the aortic valve into the aorta. That restriction causes an abnormal increase in pressure in the heart, which eventually can cause patients to have many different symptoms, including substantial shortness of breath, weakness, dizziness, chest pain, the inability to tolerate exercise, and sudden cardiac death.
Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy frequently strikes young athletes and afflicts more than 500,000 Americans. Often the problem goes undetected for a long period of time and has no known cause.
UF College of Medicine assistant professor of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, director of the Gainesville VA Catheterization Cardiac Laboratory
Karen Smith, M.D., is recognized for her expertise in the diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular disease.
Smith completed her residency in Internal Medicine and a fellowship in Cardiology and Interventional Cardiology at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, N.C. She has been a UF faculty member with the BOB体育Cardiovascular Center since 1998.