GP are spatially close to the pulmonary veins, so pulmonary vein isolation necessarily affects the GP.[4][5] GP has been shown to be a contributor to atrial fibrillation (AFib), such that ablation of the GP has been a strategy for treatment of AFib.[1]Pulsed field ablation has shown to be an AFib ablation strategy which effectively destroys the GP.[6] GP ablation alone has been shown to eliminate AFib in approximately three-quarter of AFib patients.[1]
In animal models, cardiac overload leads to change in the electrophysiological properties of these neurons, leading to the suggestion that such changes might be relevant to the pathophysiology of heart failure.[10]
In humans, the ganglia are mostly associated with the posterior or superior aspect of the atria.[11] The ganglia mediate at least some of the effects of vagal nerve stimulation on the sinoatrial node, although don't seem to mediate atrioventricular node conduction.[12]
^SHu F, Zheng L, Yao Y (2019). "Avoidance of Vagal Response During Circumferential Pulmonary Vein Isolation: Effect of Initiating Isolation From Right Anterior Ganglionated Plexi". Circulation: Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology. 12 (12): e007811. doi:10.1161/CIRCEP.119.007811. PMID31760820.
^Smith, R. B. (January 1971). "The occurrence and location of intrinsic cardiac ganglia and nerve plexuses in the human neonate". The Anatomical Record. 169 (1): 33–40. doi:10.1002/ar.1091690104.
^Aksu, Tolga; Gopinathannair, Rakesh; Gupta, Dhiraj; Pauza, Dainius H. (June 2021). "Intrinsic cardiac autonomic nervous system: What do clinical electrophysiologists need to know about the "heart brain"?". Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology. 32 (6): 1737–1747. doi:10.1111/jce.15058.