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1.
IEEE Open J Eng Med Biol ; 5: 198-204, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38606401

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: This study addressed the problem of objectively detecting leaks in P2 respirators at point of use, an essential component for healthcare workers' protection. To achieve this, we explored the use of infra-red (IR) imaging combined with machine learning algorithms on the thermal gradient across the respirator during inhalation. RESULTS: The study achieved high accuracy in predicting pass or fail outcomes of quantitative fit tests for flat-fold P2 FFRs. The IR imaging methods surpassed the limitations of self fit-checking. CONCLUSIONS: The integration of machine learning and IR imaging on the respirator itself demonstrates promise as a more reliable alternative for ensuring the proper fit of P2 respirators. This innovative approach opens new avenues for technology application in occupational hygiene and emphasizes the need for further validation across diverse respirator styles. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Our novel approach leveraging infra-red imaging and machine learning to detect P2 respirator leaks represents a critical advancement in occupational safety and healthcare workers' protection.

2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38654418

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Real-time signal processing has to date been difficult to implement in the clinical electrophysiology laboratory. To date, no open access software solutions are available in electrophysiology (EP) laboratories to facilitate real-time intraprocedural signal analysis. We aimed to develop an open access, scalable Python plug-in to allow real-time signal processing during human EP procedures. METHODS AND RESULTS: A Python-based plug in for the widely available EnsiteX mapping system was developed. This plug-in utilized the LiveSync feature of the system to allow real-time signal analysis. An open access library was developed to allow end-users to implement real-time signal analysis using this platform, implemented in the Python programming language https://github.com/anand9176/WaveWatch5000Public. CONCLUSION: We have developed and demonstrated the feasibility of a readily scalable and open-access Python-based plug in to an electroanatomic mapping system (EnSiteX) to allow real-time processing and display of electrogram (EGM) based information for the procedural electrophysiologist to view intraprocedurally in the electrophysiology laboratory. The availability, to the clinician, of traditional and novel EGM-based metrics at the time of intervention, such as atrial fibrillation ablation, allows for key mechanistic insights into critical unresolved questions regarding arrhythmia mechanism.

3.
JACC Clin Electrophysiol ; 10(2): 306-315, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38206259

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Conduction system pacing (CSP) faces challenges in achieving reliable and safe deployments. Complex interactions between tissue and lead tip can result in endocardial entanglement, a drill effect that prevents penetration. No verified ex vivo model exists to quantitatively assess this relationship. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to quantitatively characterize CSP lead tip to tissue responses for 4 commonly used leads. METHODS: CSP leads (from Medtronic, Biotronik, Boston Scientific, and Abbott) were examined for helix rotation efficiency in ex vivo ovine right ventricular septa. A custom jig was utilized for rotation measurements. Fifteen turns were executed, documenting tissue-interface changes every 90° using high-resolution photography. Response curves (input rotation vs helix rotation) were evaluated using piecewise linear regression, with a focus on output vs input response slopes and torque breakpoint events. RESULTS: We analyzed 3,840 quarter-turn CSP insertions with 4 different lead types. Helix rotations were consistently less than input: Abbott Tendril = 0.21:1, Medtronic 3830 = 0.21:1, Biotronik Solia = 0.47:1, and Boston Scientific Ingevity = 0.56:1. Torque breakpoint events were observed on average 7.22 times per insertion (95% CI: 6.08-8.35; P = NS) across all leads. In 57.8% of insertions (37 of 64), uncontrolled torque breakpoint events occurred, signaling unexpected excess helix rotations. CONCLUSIONS: Using a robust ex vivo model, we revealed a muted helix rotation response compared with input turns on the lead, and frequent torque change events during insertion. This is critical for CSP implanters, emphasizing the potential for unexpected torque breakpoint events, and suggesting the need for novel lead designs or deployment methods to enhance CSP efficiency and safety.


Assuntos
Sistema de Condução Cardíaco , Humanos , Animais , Ovinos , Torque , Sistema de Condução Cardíaco/fisiologia , Boston
4.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38083259

RESUMO

Atrial fibrillation (AF) strikingly possesses the ability to abruptly transition into more organized electrical activity and spontaneously terminate, even after persisting for long periods. Despite being central to the clinical behavior and treatment of AF, these phenomena remain incompletely understood. In this paper, we hypothesized that the spontaneous termination of AF may represent a type of percolation phase transition, which is more likely to occur when a domain spanning cluster of refractory sites in the atrium are connected (called a 'percolation cluster'). This was assessed in n=50 computational simulations of AF developed using the Aliev-Panfilov (APV) 2-dimensional cell model. In self-terminating simulations of AF, it was found that the average refractory cluster size, χ(p) (median: 647.7), and the largest refractory cluster size, M1 (median: 1702.3), abruptly increased just prior to AF spontaneously terminating, indicating the onset of the formation of a domain spanning percolation cluster. In contrast, simulations of sustained AF did not demonstrate an increase in χ(p) (median: 463.0) and M1 (median: 1448.2). Self-terminating AF simulations also demonstrated hallmark properties characteristic of a percolation phase transition, such as an abrupt increase in χ(p) at the critical occupation probability pc. The cluster size distribution was also shown to obey a power law for various occupation probabilities p, also indicative of a percolation phase transition. Collectively, these properties suggests that the spontaneous termination of AF could be a form of percolation phase transition, which could provide new insights for AF treatment.


Assuntos
Fibrilação Atrial , Humanos , Projetos Piloto , Átrios do Coração
5.
Interface Focus ; 13(6): 20230038, 2023 Dec 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38106921

RESUMO

To enable large in silico trials and personalized model predictions on clinical timescales, it is imperative that models can be constructed quickly and reproducibly. First, we aimed to overcome the challenges of constructing cardiac models at scale through developing a robust, open-source pipeline for bilayer and volumetric atrial models. Second, we aimed to investigate the effects of fibres, fibrosis and model representation on fibrillatory dynamics. To construct bilayer and volumetric models, we extended our previously developed coordinate system to incorporate transmurality, atrial regions and fibres (rule-based or data driven diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)). We created a cohort of 1000 biatrial bilayer and volumetric models derived from computed tomography (CT) data, as well as models from MRI, and electroanatomical mapping. Fibrillatory dynamics diverged between bilayer and volumetric simulations across the CT cohort (correlation coefficient for phase singularity maps: left atrial (LA) 0.27 ± 0.19, right atrial (RA) 0.41 ± 0.14). Adding fibrotic remodelling stabilized re-entries and reduced the impact of model type (LA: 0.52 ± 0.20, RA: 0.36 ± 0.18). The choice of fibre field has a small effect on paced activation data (less than 12 ms), but a larger effect on fibrillatory dynamics. Overall, we developed an open-source user-friendly pipeline for generating atrial models from imaging or electroanatomical mapping data enabling in silico clinical trials at scale (https://github.com/pcmlab/atrialmtk).

6.
Chaos ; 33(6)2023 Jun 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37307158

RESUMO

Atrial and ventricular fibrillation (AF/VF) are characterized by the repetitive regeneration of topological defects known as phase singularities (PSs). The effect of PS interactions has not been previously studied in human AF and VF. We hypothesized that PS population size would influence the rate of PS formation and destruction in human AF and VF, due to increased inter-defect interaction. PS population statistics were studied in computational simulations (Aliev-Panfilov), human AF and human VF. The influence of inter-PS interactions was evaluated by comparison between directly modeled discrete-time Markov chain (DTMC) transition matrices of the PS population changes, and M/M/∞ birth-death transition matrices of PS dynamics, which assumes that PS formations and destructions are effectively statistically independent events. Across all systems examined, PS population changes differed from those expected with M/M/∞. In human AF and VF, the formation rates decreased slightly with PS population when modeled with the DTMC, compared with the static formation rate expected through M/M/∞, suggesting new formations were being inhibited. In human AF and VF, the destruction rates increased with PS population for both models, with the DTMC rate increase exceeding the M/M/∞ estimates, indicating that PS were being destroyed faster as the PS population grew. In human AF and VF, the change in PS formation and destruction rates as the population increased differed between the two models. This indicates that the presence of additional PS influenced the likelihood of new PS formation and destruction, consistent with the notion of self-inhibitory inter-PS interactions.


Assuntos
Fibrilação Atrial , Fibrilação Ventricular , Humanos , Átrios do Coração , Cadeias de Markov , Probabilidade
7.
Heart Rhythm O2 ; 3(4): 335-343, 2022 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36097465

RESUMO

Background: Interatrial conduction has been postulated to play an important role in atrial fibrillation (AF). The pathways involved in interatrial conduction during AF remain incompletely defined. Objective: We recently showed physiological assessment of fibrillatory dynamics could be performed using renewal theory, which determines rates of phase singularity formation (λf) and destruction (λd). Using the renewal approach, we aimed to understand the role of the interatrial septum and other electrically coupled regions during AF. Method: RENEWAL-AF is a prospective multicenter observational study recruiting AF ablation patients (ACTRN 12619001172190). We studied unipolar electrograms obtained from 16 biatrial locations prior to ablation using a 16-electrode Advisor HD Grid catheter. Renewal rate constants λf and λd were calculated, and the relationships between these rate constants in regions of interatrial connectivity were examined. Results: Forty-one AF patients (28.5% female) were recruited. A positive linear correlation was observed between λf and λd (1) across the interatrial septum (λf r2 = 0.5, P < .001, λd r2 = 0.45, P < .001), (2) in regions connected by the Bachmann bundle (right atrial appendage-left atrial appendage λf r2 = 0.29, P = .001; λd r2 = 0.2, P = .008), and (3) across the inferior interatrial routes (cavotricuspid isthmus-left atrial septum λf r2 = 0.67, P < .001; λd r2 = 0.55, P < .001). Persistent AF status and left atrial volume were found to be important effect modifiers of the degree of interatrial renewal rate statistical correlation. Conclusion: Our findings support the role of interseptal statistically determined electrical disrelation in sustaining AF. Additionally, renewal theory identified preferential conduction through specific interatrial pathways during fibrillation. These findings may be of importance in identifying clinically significant targets for ablation in AF patients.

8.
Front Physiol ; 13: 920788, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36148313

RESUMO

Background and Objective: Renewal theory is a statistical approach to model the formation and destruction of phase singularities (PS), which occur at the pivots of spiral waves. A common issue arising during observation of renewal processes is an inspection paradox, due to oversampling of longer events. The objective of this study was to characterise the effect of a potential inspection paradox on the perception of PS lifetimes in cardiac fibrillation. Methods: A multisystem, multi-modality study was performed, examining computational simulations (Aliev-Panfilov (APV) model, Courtmanche-Nattel model), experimentally acquired optical mapping Atrial and Ventricular Fibrillation (AF/VF) data, and clinically acquired human AF and VF. Distributions of all PS lifetimes across full epochs of AF, VF, or computational simulations, were compared with distributions formed from lifetimes of PS existing at 10,000 simulated commencement timepoints. Results: In all systems, an inspection paradox led towards oversampling of PS with longer lifetimes. In APV computational simulations there was a mean PS lifetime shift of +84.9% (95% CI, ± 0.3%) (p < 0.001 for observed vs overall), in Courtmanche-Nattel simulations of AF +692.9% (95% CI, ±57.7%) (p < 0.001), in optically mapped rat AF +374.6% (95% CI, ± 88.5%) (p = 0.052), in human AF mapped with basket catheters +129.2% (95% CI, ±4.1%) (p < 0.05), human AF-HD grid catheters 150.8% (95% CI, ± 9.0%) (p < 0.001), in optically mapped rat VF +171.3% (95% CI, ±15.6%) (p < 0.001), in human epicardial VF 153.5% (95% CI, ±15.7%) (p < 0.001). Conclusion: Visual inspection of phase movies has the potential to systematically oversample longer lasting PS, due to an inspection paradox. An inspection paradox is minimised by consideration of the overall distribution of PS lifetimes.

9.
Chaos ; 32(3): 032101, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35364849

RESUMO

The mechanisms governing cardiac fibrillation remain unclear; however, it most likely represents a form of spatiotemporal chaos with conservative system dynamics. Renewal theory has recently been suggested as a statistical formulation with governing equations to quantify the formation and destruction of wavelets and rotors in fibrillatory dynamics. In this perspective Review, we aim to explain the origin of the renewal theory paradigm in spatiotemporal chaos. The ergodic nature of pattern formation in spatiotemporal chaos is demonstrated through the use of three chaotic systems: two classical systems and a simulation of cardiac fibrillation. The logistic map and the baker's transformation are used to demonstrate how the apparently random appearance of patterns in classical chaotic systems has macroscopic parameters that are predictable in a statistical sense. We demonstrate that the renewal theory approach developed for cardiac fibrillation statistically predicts pattern formation in these classical chaotic systems. Renewal theory provides governing equations to describe the apparently random formation and destruction of wavelets and rotors in atrial fibrillation (AF) and ventricular fibrillation (VF). This statistical framework for fibrillatory dynamics provides a holistic understanding of observed rotor and wavelet dynamics and is of conceptual significance in informing the clinical and mechanistic research of the rotor and multiple-wavelet mechanisms of AF and VF.


Assuntos
Fibrilação Atrial , Simulação por Computador , Humanos , Fibrilação Ventricular
10.
Heart Rhythm ; 19(2): 295-305, 2022 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34662707

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Ventricular fibrillation (VF) is characterized by multiple wavelets and rotors. No equation to predict the number of rotors and wavelets observed during fibrillation has been validated in human VF. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that a single equation derived from a Markov M/M/∞ birth-death process could predict the number of rotors and wavelets occurring in human clinical VF. METHODS: Epicardial induced VF (256-electrode) recordings obtained from patients undergoing cardiac surgery were studied (12 patients; 62 epochs). Rate constants for phase singularity (PS) (which occur at the pivot points of rotors) and wavefront (WF) formation and destruction were derived by fitting distributions to PS and WF interformation and lifetimes. These rate constants were combined in an M/M/∞ governing equation to predict the number of PS and WF in VF episodes. Observed distributions were compared to those predicted by the M/M/∞ equation. RESULTS: The M/M/∞ equation accurately predicted average PS and WF number and population distribution, demonstrated in all epochs. Self-terminating episodes of VF were distinguished from VF episodes requiring termination by a trend toward slower PS destruction, slower rates of PS formation, and a slower mixing rate of the VF process, indicated by larger values of the second largest eigenvalue modulus of the M/M/∞ birth-death matrix. The longest-lasting PS (associated with rotors) had shorter interactivation time intervals compared to shorter-lasting PS lasting <150 ms (∼1 PS rotation in human VF). CONCLUSION: The M/M/∞ equation explains the number of wavelets and rotors observed, supporting a paradigm of VF based on statistical fibrillatory dynamics.


Assuntos
Morte Súbita Cardíaca/etiologia , Fibrilação Ventricular/fisiopatologia , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Cardíacos , Mapeamento Epicárdico , Feminino , Sistema de Condução Cardíaco/fisiopatologia , Humanos , Masculino , Cadeias de Markov , Modelos Cardiovasculares
11.
Curr Cardiol Rev ; 2021 12 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34886777

RESUMO

Since the authors are not responding to the editor's requests to fulfill the editorial requirement, therefore, the article has been withdrawn by the publisher.Bentham Science apologizes to the readers of the journal for any inconvenience this may have caused.The Bentham Editorial Policy on Article Withdrawal can be found at https://benthamscience.com/editorial-policies-main.php. Bentham Science Disclaimer: It is a condition of publication that manuscripts submitted to this journal have not been published and will not be simultaneously submitted or published elsewhere. Furthermore, any data, illustration, structure or table that has been published elsewhere must be reported, and copyright permission for reproduction must be obtained. Plagiarism is strictly forbidden, and by submitting the article for publication the authors agree that the publishers have the legal right to take appropriate action against the authors, if plagiarism or fabricated information is discovered. By submitting a manuscript the authors agree that the copyright of their article is transferred to the publishers if and when the article is accepted for publication.

12.
J Arrhythm ; 37(4): 922-930, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34386118

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is characterized by the repetitive regeneration of unstable rotational events, the pivot of which are known as phase singularities (PSs). The spatial concentration and distribution of PSs have not been systematically investigated using quantitative statistical approaches. OBJECTIVES: We utilized a geospatial statistical approach to determine the presence of local spatial concentration and global clustering of PSs in biatrial human AF recordings. METHODS: 64-electrode conventional basket (~5 min, n = 18 patients, persistent AF) recordings were studied. Phase maps were produced using a Hilbert-transform based approach. PSs were characterized spatially using the following approaches: (i) local "hotspots" of high phase singularity (PS) concentration using Getis-Ord Gi* (Z ≥ 1.96, P ≤ .05) and (ii) global spatial clustering using Moran's I (inverse distance matrix). RESULTS: Episodes of AF were analyzed from basket catheter recordings (H: 41 epochs, 120 000 s, n = 18 patients). The Getis-Ord Gi* statistic showed local PS hotspots in 12/41 basket recordings. As a metric of spatial clustering, Moran's I showed an overall mean of 0.033 (95% CI: 0.0003-0.065), consistent with the notion of complete spatial randomness. CONCLUSION: Using a systematic, quantitative geospatial statistical approach, evidence for the existence of spatial concentrations ("hotspots") of PSs were detectable in human AF, along with evidence of spatial clustering. Geospatial statistical approaches offer a new approach to map and ablate PS clusters using substrate-based approaches.

13.
Arrhythm Electrophysiol Rev ; 10(2): 77-84, 2021 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34401179

RESUMO

Despite a century of research, the mechanisms of AF remain unresolved. A universal motif within AF research has been unstable re-entry, but this remains poorly characterised, with competing key conceptual paradigms of multiple wavelets and more driving rotors. Understanding the mechanisms of AF is clinically relevant, especially with regard to treatment and ablation of the more persistent forms of AF. Here, the authors outline the surprising but reproducible finding that unstable re-entrant circuits are born and destroyed at quasi-stationary rates, a finding based on a branch of mathematics known as renewal theory. Renewal theory may be a way to potentially unify the multiple wavelet and rotor theories. The renewal rate constants are potentially attractive because they are temporally stable parameters of a defined probability distribution (the exponential distribution) and can be estimated with precision and accuracy due to the principles of renewal theory. In this perspective review, this new representational architecture for AF is explained and placed into context, and the clinical and mechanistic implications are discussed.

15.
J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol ; 32(4): 1147-1160, 2021 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33682258

RESUMO

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most commonly encountered cardiac arrhythmia in clinical practice. However, current therapeutic interventions for atrial fibrillation have limited clinical efficacy as a consequence of major knowledge gaps in the mechanisms sustaining atrial fibrillation. From a mechanistic perspective, there is increasing evidence that atrial fibrosis plays a central role in the maintenance and perpetuation of atrial fibrillation. Electrophysiologically, atrial fibrosis results in alterations in conduction velocity, cellular refractoriness, and produces conduction block promoting meandering, unstable wavelets and micro-reentrant circuits. Clinically, atrial fibrosis has also linked to poor clinical outcomes including AF-related thromboembolic complications and arrhythmia recurrences post catheter ablation. In this article, we review the pathophysiology behind the formation of fibrosis as AF progresses, the role of fibrosis in arrhythmogenesis, surrogate markers for detection of fibrosis using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, echocardiography and electroanatomic mapping, along with their respective limitations. We then proceed to review the current evidence behind therapeutic interventions targeting atrial fibrosis, including drugs and substrate-based catheter ablation therapies followed by the potential future use of electro phenotyping for AF characterization to overcome the limitations of contemporary substrate-based methodologies.


Assuntos
Fibrilação Atrial , Ablação por Cateter , Fibrilação Atrial/diagnóstico , Fibrilação Atrial/patologia , Fibrilação Atrial/terapia , Fibrose , Átrios do Coração/diagnóstico por imagem , Átrios do Coração/patologia , Humanos , Resultado do Tratamento
16.
J Arrhythm ; 36(4): 660-667, 2020 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32782637

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Unstable functional reentrant circuits known as rotors have been consistently observed in atrial fibrillation and are mechanistically believed critical to the maintenance of the arrhythmia. Recently, using a Poisson renewal theory-based quantitative framework, we have demonstrated that rotor formation (λf) and destruction rates (λd) can be measured using in vivo electrophysiologic data. However, the association of λf and λd with clinical, electrical, and structural markers of atrial fibrillation phenotype is unknown. METHODS: RENEWAL-AF is a multicenter prospective cross-sectional study recruiting adult patients with paroxysmal or persistent atrial fibrillation undergoing clinically indicated catheter ablation. Patients will undergo intraprocedural electrophysiologic atrial fibrillation mapping, with λf and λd to be determined from 2-minute unipolar electrogram recordings acquired before ablation. The primary objective will be to determine the association of λf and λd as markers of fibrillatory dynamics with clinical, electrical, and structural markers of atrial fibrillation clinical phenotype, measured by preablation transthoracic echocardiogram and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. An exploratory objective is the noninvasive assessment of λf and λd using surface ECG characteristics via a machine learning approach. RESULTS: Not applicable. CONCLUSION: This pilot study will provide insight into the correlation between λf/λd with clinical, electrophysiological, and structural markers of atrial fibrillation phenotype and provide a foundation for the development of noninvasive assessment of λf/λd using surface ECG characteristics will help expand the use of λf/λd in clinical practice.

17.
Front Physiol ; 11: 616866, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33519522

RESUMO

RATIONALE: A quantitative framework to summarize and explain the quasi-stationary population dynamics of unstable phase singularities (PS) and wavelets in human atrial fibrillation (AF) is at present lacking. Building on recent evidence showing that the formation and destruction of PS and wavelets in AF can be represented as renewal processes, we sought to establish such a quantitative framework, which could also potentially provide insight into the mechanisms of spontaneous AF termination. OBJECTIVES: Here, we hypothesized that the observed number of PS or wavelets in AF could be governed by a common set of renewal rate constants λ f (for PS or wavelet formation) and λ d (PS or wavelet destruction), with steady-state population dynamics modeled as an M/M/∞ birth-death process. We further hypothesized that changes to the M/M/∞ birth-death matrix would explain spontaneous AF termination. METHODS AND RESULTS: AF was studied in in a multimodality, multispecies study in humans, animal experimental models (rats and sheep) and Ramirez-Nattel-Courtemanche model computer simulations. We demonstrated: (i) that λ f and λ d can be combined in a Markov M/M/∞ process to accurately model the observed average number and population distribution of PS and wavelets in all systems at different scales of mapping; and (ii) that slowing of the rate constants λ f and λ d is associated with slower mixing rates of the M/M/∞ birth-death matrix, providing an explanation for spontaneous AF termination. CONCLUSION: M/M/∞ birth-death processes provide an accurate quantitative representational architecture to characterize PS and wavelet population dynamics in AF, by providing governing equations to understand the regeneration of PS and wavelets during sustained AF, as well as providing insight into the mechanism of spontaneous AF termination.

18.
Heart Rhythm ; 17(2): 324-331, 2020 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31493590

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The spatial resolution of pacemapping using 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) or PaSo software is unknown. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine the spatial resolution of traditional ECG pacemapping and pacemapping using the PaSo coefficients. METHODS: Seventeen patients undergoing ablation of supraventricular tachycardias or atrioventricular node were included. After ablation, chamber (right ventricular outflow tract/rest of the right ventricle/left ventricle) geometry was created with Carto 3. Pacingwas performed from any point in these cardiac regions, the QRS morphology being the template and the point being considered as arrhythmia "origin." Subsequently, pacing was performed from points around the "origin" (1538 points). The QRS of these tagged points were compared by traditional ECG pacemapping and PaSo coefficients. The spatial resolution was calculated using correlations between the distance away from the origin (measured by 3 computational methods) and traditional ECG pacemapping and PaSo coefficients, independently. RESULTS: A 0.01-unit decrease in the PaSo coefficient resulted in 1.1 mm increased Cartesian distance (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.9-1.3 mm; P < .001) and 2.4 mm increased geodesic distance (95% CI 1.9-2.9 mm; P < .001) and 664 mm3 increase in convex hull volume (95% CI 423-906 mm3; P < .0001). For traditional ECG pacemapping, each decrease in lead match resulted in 1.7 mm increased Cartesian distance (95% CI 1.5-2.0 mm; P < .001) and 3.4 mm increased geodesic distance (95% CI 2.8-4.1 mm; P < .001) and 712 mm3 increase in convex hull volume (95% CI 599-830 mm3; P < .0001). Both PaSo coefficients and traditional pacemapping showed a significant inverse linear correlation with distance from the "origin." CONCLUSION: The resolution of mapping using the Paso software is better than that of traditional pacemapping.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Eletrocardiografia/métodos , Sistema de Condução Cardíaco/fisiopatologia , Taquicardia Supraventricular/fisiopatologia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Taquicardia Supraventricular/diagnóstico
19.
Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol ; 12(12): e007569, 2019 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31813270

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Despite a century of research, no clear quantitative framework exists to model the fundamental processes responsible for the continuous formation and destruction of phase singularities (PS) in cardiac fibrillation. We hypothesized PS formation/destruction in fibrillation could be modeled as self-regenerating Poisson renewal processes, producing exponential distributions of interevent times governed by constant rate parameters defined by the prevailing properties of each system. METHODS: PS formation/destruction were studied in 5 systems: (1) human persistent atrial fibrillation (n=20), (2) tachypaced sheep atrial fibrillation (n=5), (3) rat atrial fibrillation (n=4), (5) rat ventricular fibrillation (n=11), and (5) computer-simulated fibrillation. PS time-to-event data were fitted by exponential probability distribution functions computed using maximum entropy theory, and rates of PS formation and destruction (λf/λd) determined. A systematic review was conducted to cross-validate with source data from literature. RESULTS: In all systems, PS lifetime and interformation times were consistent with underlying Poisson renewal processes (human: λf, 4.2%/ms±1.1 [95% CI, 4.0-5.0], λd, 4.6%/ms±1.5 [95% CI, 4.3-4.9]; sheep: λf, 4.4%/ms [95% CI, 4.1-4.7], λd, 4.6%/ms±1.4 [95% CI, 4.3-4.8]; rat atrial fibrillation: λf, 33%/ms±8.8 [95% CI, 11-55], λd, 38%/ms [95% CI, 22-55]; rat ventricular fibrillation: λf, 38%/ms±24 [95% CI, 22-55], λf, 46%/ms±21 [95% CI, 31-60]; simulated fibrillation λd, 6.6-8.97%/ms [95% CI, 4.1-6.7]; R2≥0.90 in all cases). All PS distributions identified through systematic review were also consistent with an underlying Poisson renewal process. CONCLUSIONS: Poisson renewal theory provides an evolutionarily preserved universal framework to quantify formation and destruction of rotational events in cardiac fibrillation.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação , Fibrilação Atrial/fisiopatologia , Sistema de Condução Cardíaco/fisiopatologia , Frequência Cardíaca , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Fibrilação Ventricular/fisiopatologia , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Simulação por Computador , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Humanos , Estudos Multicêntricos como Assunto , Estudos Observacionais como Assunto , Ratos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Carneiro Doméstico , Processos Estocásticos , Fatores de Tempo , Fibrilação Ventricular/diagnóstico
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