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Validation of novel 3-dimensional electrocardiographic mapping of atrial tachycardias by invasive mapping and ablation: a multicenter study.

Authors :
UCL - SSS/IREC/MONT - Pôle Mont Godinne
UCL - (MGD) Service de cardiologie
Shah, Ashok J
Hocini, Meleze
Xhaet, Olivier
Pascale, Patrizio
Roten, Laurent
Wilton, Stephen B
Linton, Nick
Scherr, Daniel
Miyazaki, Shinsuke
Jadidi, Amir S
Liu, Xingpeng
Forclaz, Andrei
Nault, Isabelle
Rivard, Lena
Pedersen, Michala E F
Derval, Nicolas
Sacher, Frederic
Knecht, Sebastien
Jais, Pierre
Dubois, Remi
Eliautou, Sandra
Bokan, Ryan
Strom, Maria
Ramanathan, Charu
Cakulev, Ivan
Sahadevan, Jayakumar
Lindsay, Bruce
Waldo, Albert L
Haissaguerre, Michel
UCL - SSS/IREC/MONT - Pôle Mont Godinne
UCL - (MGD) Service de cardiologie
Shah, Ashok J
Hocini, Meleze
Xhaet, Olivier
Pascale, Patrizio
Roten, Laurent
Wilton, Stephen B
Linton, Nick
Scherr, Daniel
Miyazaki, Shinsuke
Jadidi, Amir S
Liu, Xingpeng
Forclaz, Andrei
Nault, Isabelle
Rivard, Lena
Pedersen, Michala E F
Derval, Nicolas
Sacher, Frederic
Knecht, Sebastien
Jais, Pierre
Dubois, Remi
Eliautou, Sandra
Bokan, Ryan
Strom, Maria
Ramanathan, Charu
Cakulev, Ivan
Sahadevan, Jayakumar
Lindsay, Bruce
Waldo, Albert L
Haissaguerre, Michel
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, Vol. 62, no.10, p. 889-97 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

This study prospectively evaluated the role of a novel 3-dimensional, noninvasive, beat-by-beat mapping system, Electrocardiographic Mapping (ECM), in facilitating the diagnosis of atrial tachycardias (AT). Conventional 12-lead electrocardiogram, a widely used noninvasive tool in clinical arrhythmia practice, has diagnostic limitations. Various AT (de novo and post-atrial fibrillation ablation) were mapped using ECM followed by standard-of-care electrophysiological mapping and ablation in 52 patients. The ECM consisted of recording body surface electrograms from a 252-electrode-vest placed on the torso combined with computed tomography-scan-based biatrial anatomy (CardioInsight Inc., Cleveland, Ohio). We evaluated the feasibility of this system in defining the mechanism of AT-macro-re-entrant (perimitral, cavotricuspid isthmus-dependent, and roof-dependent circuits) versus centrifugal (focal-source) activation-and the location of arrhythmia in centrifugal AT. The accuracy of the noninvasive diagnosis and detection of ablation targets was evaluated vis-à-vis subsequent invasive mapping and successful ablation. Comparison between ECM and electrophysiological diagnosis could be accomplished in 48 patients (48 AT) but was not possible in 4 patients where the AT mechanism changed to another AT (n = 1), atrial fibrillation (n = 1), or sinus rhythm (n = 2) during the electrophysiological procedure. ECM correctly diagnosed AT mechanisms in 44 of 48 (92%) AT: macro-re-entry in 23 of 27; and focal-onset with centrifugal activation in 21 of 21. The region of interest for focal AT perfectly matched in 21 of 21 (100%) AT. The 2:1 ventricular conduction and low-amplitude P waves challenged the diagnosis of 4 of 27 macro-re-entrant (perimitral) AT that can be overcome by injecting atrioventricular node blockers and signal averaging, respectively. This prospective multicenter series shows a high success rate of ECM in accurately diagnosing the mechanism of AT and the location of fo

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, Vol. 62, no.10, p. 889-97 (2013)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1288279426
Document Type :
Electronic Resource