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Scar voltage threshold determination using ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging integration in a porcine infarct model: Influence of interelectrode distances and three-dimensional spatial effects of scar

Authors :
Tung, R
Kim, S
Yagishita, D
Vaseghi, M
Ennis, DB
Ouadah, S
Ajijola, OA
Bradfield, JS
Mahapatra, S
Finn, P
Shivkumar, K
Source :
Heart rhythm, vol 13, iss 10, Tung, R; Kim, S; Yagishita, D; Vaseghi, M; Ennis, DB; Ouadah, S; et al.(2016). Scar voltage threshold determination using ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging integration in a porcine infarct model: Influence of interelectrode distances and three-dimensional spatial effects of scar. HEART RHYTHM, 13(10), 1993-2002. doi: 10.1016/j.hrthm.2016.07.003. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1sb4c7wj
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2016.

Abstract

BackgroundStudies analyzing optimal voltage thresholds for scar detection with electroanatomic mapping frequently lack a gold standard for comparison.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to use a porcine infarct model with ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) integration to characterize the relationship between interelectrode spacing and bipolar voltage thresholds and examine the influence of 3-dimensional scar on unipolar voltages.MethodsThirty-two combined endocardial-epicardial electroanatomic maps were created in 8 postinfarct porcine subjects (bipolar 2-mm, 5-mm, and 8-mm interelectrode spacing and unipolar) for comparison with ex vivo MRI. Two thresholds were compared: (1) 95% normal distribution and (2) best fit to MRI. Direct electrogram analysis was performed in regions across from MRI-defined scar and adjacent to scar border zone.ResultsA linear increase in optimal thresholds was observed with wider bipole spacing. The 95% thresholds for scar were lower than MRI-matched thresholds with moderate sensitivity for nontransmural scar (54% endo, 63% epi). Unipolar endocardial scar area exceeded MRI-defined scar, resulting in mismatched false scar in 5 of 8 (63%). Endocardial and epicardial unipolar voltages were lower than normal in regions adjacent and across from scar.ConclusionVariations in interelectrode spacing necessitate tailored bipolar voltage thresholds to optimize scar detection. Statistical 95% thresholds appear to be conservative and not fully sensitive for the detection of scar defined by high-resolution ex vivo MRI. In the presence of endocardial scar, unipolar mapping to quantitatively characterize epicardial scar may be overly sensitive due to 3-dimensional spatial averaging.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart rhythm, vol 13, iss 10, Tung, R; Kim, S; Yagishita, D; Vaseghi, M; Ennis, DB; Ouadah, S; et al.(2016). Scar voltage threshold determination using ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging integration in a porcine infarct model: Influence of interelectrode distances and three-dimensional spatial effects of scar. HEART RHYTHM, 13(10), 1993-2002. doi: 10.1016/j.hrthm.2016.07.003. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1sb4c7wj
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..3abb1287936e22cb658ceabacad643fb