학술논문

Sequential Electro-Anatomical Mapping Methodology and Preliminary Results for Reentry Vulnerability Index Estimation
Document Type
Conference
Source
2018 Computing in Cardiology Conference (CinC) Computing in Cardiology Conference (CinC), 2018. 45:1-4 Sep, 2018
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Signal Processing and Analysis
Electrocardiography
Signal to noise ratio
Noise measurement
Correlation
Catheters
Estimation
Heart rate variability
Language
ISSN
2325-887X
Abstract
Ventricular tachycardia (VT) recurrence after catheter ablation remains frequent and improved ablation strategies are needed. The re-entry vulnerability index (RVI) is an activation-repolarization marker to localize critical sites for VT initiation. Its use is limited since current electro-anatomical mapping systems (EAMS) cannot provide global measurement of activation and repolarization times within a single beat. We carried out a simulation study to assess a simple method to measure RVI using data collected by sequential EAMS and we investigated the effect of background noise, RT variability (σ RT) and ectopics on RVI estimation. The mean correlation coefficient between single ECG beats and a representative template is used as inclusion/exclusion criterion. Localization of the vulnerable region associated with 5% bottom RVI was accurate (sensitivity 80±8%, specificity> 99± 1%) for moderate to large repolarization variability (5 ≤ σRT ≤ 20 ms) and moderate level of noise (S N R ≥ 10 dB) but it deteriorated for σRT ≥ 25 ms and S N R < 5 dB. Sensitivity remained high even when RVI estimates were only moderately accurate (cc > 0.67 ± 0.05, MAE < 25 ± 1 ms). The number of ectopic beats did not affect the results. In the in-vivo case analyzed, the sites of low RVI and VT exit was close (5.1 mm).