
Mon Medical Center achieves state first in new AFib procedure
Mon Health Heart & Vascular Center electrophysiologist Dr. Salam Sbaity and his team combined the application of the Watchman and the Farapulse Pulsed Field Ablation system — both from Boston Scientific — in a single procedure.
AFIb is when the top two chambers of the heart — the atria — beat too fast and with an irregular rhythm (fibrillation), Boston Scientific said.
Sbaity explained why combining the two technologies is significant. AFib is the most common abnormal heart rhythm and West Virginia is among the top three states for prevalence.
AFib symptoms include palpitations, dizziness and shortness of breath, he said, and can lead to heart failure, blood clots and stroke.
There are two main advanced treatments. One is to treat the source of clots and stroke by closing the left atrial appendage, which extends off of the left atrium. The Watchman device is used to close it off.
The other is to treat the rhythm itself, he said. Muscle sleeves lead from the atrium into four pulmonary veins and are the source of electrical instability that can start the abnormal rhythm.
The abnormal rhythm is treated via cauterization, also known as ablation. The two forms of ablation used are extreme heat — radio frequency ablation — and extreme cold, cryoablation.
Boston Scientific announced in January 2024 that the FDA approved a new form, pulsed field ablation, with the Farapulse. The Farapulse catheter is tipped with five circular splines that can change shapes — including a flower — to fit into the entry of veins, circle and isolate them.
The Farapulse uses electrical pulses to create pores in the cell membranes and the cells die without heat or freezing, Sbaity said. It's safe for the structure of the veins and structures around them.
Boston Scientific reported that 12-month data from a pivotal clinical trial to directly compare the efficacy and safety of the Farapulse system against standard-of-care ablation found that Farapulse therapy was as safe and effective as conventional thermal ablation, with statistically shorter ablation times and a quicker learning curve for physicians.
"That made the procedure itself more effective and more safe, " he said. Sbaity and his partner, Dr. Matt Gaskill, performed the first Farapulse procedure in the state. "In reviewing the literature for a while, we were seeing that this is the future of ablation."
It's faster, more effective and safer, he said. Both are done via a catheter through the groin and into the same chamber of the heart. So it allows the flexibility to add another procedure without increasing time and risks.
The dual procedure has to be guided by internal imaging, and Sbaity took a further advanced step by employing intracardiac ultrasound — also called intracardiac echocardiography, ICE — instead of the usual transesophageal echocardiography, TEE.
TEE requires a second physician sending a scope down the throat, posing the risk of esophageal damage, the American Heart Association says. ICE can be performed by the primary physician doing the catheter procedure, avoiding the additional intubation and damage risks.
Only 8 % of cases of appendage closure in country are done with ICE, Sbaity said.
Combining the two procedures, Sbaity said, allows him to offer the patient advanced treatment of both problems, with the risks associated with separate procedures pared down to one, and with reduced recovery time.
I think this is the wave of the future, combining the two procedures together whenever both are necessary, " he said.
The Mon team is participating in clinical trials comparing appendage closure against blood thinners for people who are not having problems with blood thinners, he said. One study showed closure is better statistically and better in terms of risks. "I think the other two studies will probably prove the same."
What that means, he said, "if it goes that way, then anyone on blood thinner who goes for an ablation would as well want to close the appendage." This would increase the number of patients who benefit from the combined procedure. He expects most patients will want it.
Sbaity said he has done just the one combined procedure so far, but five more are scheduled.
"We're proud here at Mon to offer the most advanced technologies for our patients in West Virginia, " he said, "and we always want to be and have been at the forefront of innovation. That allows the population of West Virginia to have access to the most excellent, best care in the country."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Dominion Post
4 days ago
- Dominion Post
TMC Technologies advancing satellite space research
dbeard@ MORGANTOWN – TMC Technologies is aiming to soar into the satellite research universe with its FlexSat and SSDT products. Both were launched in 2024, developed for NASA. They've sold four so far, to the Department of Defense. Now they are looking to broaden their customer base across the U.S. and internationally. The FlexSat The FlexSat looks unassuming – interchangeable components attached to a foot-square sheet of plastic. 'It's a satellite in a box,' said TMC Chief Engineer Scott Zemerick. 'You can purchase it, and without having to build your own satellite, we'll provide one to you out of the box, all integrated, all working.' It's customizable for any research a customer wants to do in space. 'This helps you get up and running faster, it helps you test out your experiment faster.' Potential customers – universities and research-and-development companies, for instance – don't have the money to build their own satellites and spacecraft, he said. But they can buy a FlexSat and have it attached to a CubeSat – a small modular satellite built up in cubes – that would be launched into space by NASA or SpaceX, and deployed into orbit. Clay Vincent with the FlexSat They can have one built in about two to three weeks, he said. It's delivered in a protective pelican case. The SSDT – Small Satellite Digital Twin – is a FlexSat cousin. It's an all-digital software version of the Flex Sat that can be downloaded and run on the customer's computer. It's a data modeling platform, Zachary Lynch, TMC systems engineer, explained. It delivers simulated spacecraft data and updates in real time as a spacecraft in orbit would. It can be used for such things as flight software development and testing, and modeling a mission before the FlexSat goes into space. 'The keyword being customizable,' he said. 'We can help our customers with expertise they may not have.' Back in 2024, TMCwas awarded a NASA Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase 1 contract for the SSDT to support Active Space-Debris Removal research using space-based lasers. TMC partnered with the WVU Center for Innovation in Space Exploration and Researchand the West Virginia Small Satellite Center to address the need for a mature simulation test bed to evaluate and analyze space-based laser techniques for active space debris remediation and removal. Both products' first target audience was NASA, said TMC's Vice President of Federal Civilian Division Programs Denise Lindsey. But they saw that universities are doing research critical to space missions. And large industry companies – anyone that flies satellites – could benefit from them. For the SSDT, she said, it could be adapted to Navy and Air Force missions – unmanned autonomous missions that use the same type of software. TMC is house in an unassuming, two-story commercial building on Pleasant Valley Road. You wouldn't guess at the high-tech work going on in there. It's another example of a West Virginia-based company making an impact in advancing technology for the world. 'We pride ourselves on that,' Lindsey said. TMC employs 140 people here and across the country. TMC built West Virginia's first orbiting satellite — the STF-1 CubeSat – for NASA. It supports software assurance for SpaceX, and the FBI NICS E-Check system for firearm purchases. Founder, CEO and President Wade Linger said, 'It's amazing how little people realize the kind of technology being done by West Virginians right now, the contributions that we're making.'


Dominion Post
26-06-2025
- Dominion Post
U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright visits NETL
dbeard@ MORGANTOWN – U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright toured the National Energy Technology Laboratory Morgantown campus on Tuesday, as part of his ongoing tour of all 17 Department of Energy National Laboratories. He saw the facilities – including the under-construction Computational Science and Engineering Center – met researchers and learned about their projects. He talked about the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' – the budget reconciliation bill working its way through Congress. 'It's critical for the energy world that I work in,' he said. There have been large distortions across the energy market, particularly electricity, and that needs to be reformed. 'Energy is about humans,' he said. 'We want to make people's lives better.' That means more energy, lower cost energy, jobs, and winning the Artificial Intelligence arms race. The bill's reforms on subsidies and penalties are key to getting the system going in the right direction. NETL is devoted to fossil fuel research, and coal and natural gas are the two biggest sources of electricity worldwide, he said. 'The things that are worked on here are big targets for big benefits to humanity.' Wright took time for a Q&A session with the press. The Dominion Post noted that in the 13-state PJM regional energy grid, 40% of New Service Requests are for solar projects, while only 6.7% are for natural gas and none are for coal. In that context, we asked if there is a future for coal. 'The future for coal is long and bright,' he said. It accounts for a third of all the electricity generated on the planet – more than wind and solar combined. And its available day and night. Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, was PJM's peak winter demand day, and gas and coal supplied 70% of the power, wind and solar just 3%. On Monday, in the sun and heat, wind and solar made up just 8%. Answering another question, he said that one of his secretarial powers is stopping the closure of power plants. Some should be retired, but so many have been closed that are still midstream in their lives and are critical to a secure grid. Growing demand for data centers for AI will increase the demand for electricity, he said. 'If you're going to add a lot of new capacity, the first thing you should do is stop shrinking the capacity you have.' About 40 coal plants are slated for closure this year. 'Our biggest impact is going to stop the closure of most of those.' Wright takes questions from the press. On the topic of AI and data centers, Wright talked about permitting hurdles and the need to make it easier to build them. The 17 national laboratories have a lot of land and are accepting proposals for data centers to be cited on those lands, possibly with cooperative agreements to allow the labs to tap into those centers' computational powers. 'You will see data centers built on national lab property.' He concluded, 'I think the future of energy here in West Virginia is super exciting.' The state has been an energy powerhouse across its history. Natural gas and natural gas liquids, oil and coal are the fastest growing power sources across the world. And West Virginia is a businesses-friendly state with cutting-edge industry such as Form Energy in Weirton – the iron-air battery manufacturing facility. 'I think the outlook for energy and industry in West Virginia is quite bright.'
Yahoo
25-06-2025
- Yahoo
Oppenheimer Sees Strong Upside for Abbott (ABT) with Volt System and Diabetes Innovation
Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT) ranks among the top stocks for an early retirement portfolio. On June 18, Oppenheimer reaffirmed its $140 price target and Outperform rating on Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT), noting growing confidence in the company's Volt system and future glucose-ketone monitoring technology. Following the observation of live PFA (pulsed field ablation) case viewings of rival systems, such as Varipulse/CARTO and Farapulse/Opal, the research firm voiced increasing optimism concerning Volt. Varipulse's uptake has been 'subdued' despite price parity with Farapulse, according to Oppenheimer. Oppenheimer found two significant catalysts for Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT) that might boost the company's performance in the second half of 2025. First, if Abbott leverages cost as a competitive advantage, the possible approval of Volt PMA might result in 'significant gains' in electrophysiology. The second driver is Abbott's glucose-ketone dual sensor system, which was recently revealed to be integrated with the insulin pump from Tandem Diabetes Care. Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT) is a leading global healthcare company that manufactures a wide range of branded generic medications, medical devices, diagnostics, and nutritional items. While we acknowledge the potential of ABT as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. Read More: and Disclosure: None.