Your health care provider will likely order several tests to get more information about your heart health before determining if the maze procedure is a good option for you. If you're scheduled for surgery, your care team will talk with you about how to prepare and what to bring to the hospital.
During the procedure
For a maze procedure, you are typically given a drug that puts you to sleep (general anesthesia). You are also placed on a heart-lung machine.
During the maze procedure, a surgeon makes an incision in your chest to access the upper chambers of the heart. The surgeon uses heat (radiofrequency energy), extreme cold (cryothermal energy) or a scalpel to make several precise cuts in the heart tissue. The cuts create a pattern (maze) of lines that eventually scar. The scar tissue blocks the faulty electrical signals that cause irregular heartbeats.
While you're on the heart-lung machine, you might also have other needed cardiac surgeries, such as valve repair or pacemaker placement.
Some people undergoing a maze procedure might be treated with a robot-assisted catheter ablation procedure. This procedure can also be done using a combination of surgical and catheter-based interventions. These variations are sometimes referred to as mini-maze or hybrid approaches.