학술논문

In Silico Study of Local Electrical Impedance Measurements in the Atria - Towards Understanding and Quantifying Dependencies in Human
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng. Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on. 70(2):533-543 Feb, 2023
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Catheters
Electrodes
Impedance measurement
Impedance
Biomedical measurement
Temperature measurement
Biomedical engineering
Ablation
atrial substrate
bioimpedance
cardiac electrophysiology
local impedance
radio frequency ablation
Language
ISSN
0018-9294
1558-2531
Abstract
Background: Electrical impedance measurements have become an accepted tool for monitoring intracardiac radio frequency ablation. Recently, the long-established generator impedance was joined by novel local impedance measurement capabilities with all electrical circuit terminals being accommodated within the catheter. Objective: This work aims at in silico quantification of distinct influencing factors that have remained challenges due to the lack of ground truth knowledge and the superposition of effects in clinical settings. Methods: We introduced a highly detailed in silico model of two local impedance enabled catheters, namely IntellaNav MiFi OI and IntellaNav Stablepoint, embedded in a series of clinically relevant environments. Assigning material and frequency specific conductivities and subsequently calculating the spread of the electrical field with the finite element method yielded in silico local impedances. The in silico model was validated by comparison to in vitro measurements of standardized sodium chloride solutions. We then investigated the effect of the withdrawal of the catheter into the transseptal sheath, catheter-tissue interaction, insertion of the catheter into pulmonary veins, and catheter irrigation. Results: All simulated setups were in line with in vitro experiments and in human measurements and gave detailed insight into determinants of local impedance changes as well as the relation between values measured with two different devices. Conclusion: The in silico environment proved to be capable of resembling clinical scenarios and quantifying local impedance changes. Significance: The tool can assists the interpretation of measurements in humans and has the potential to support future catheter development.