Literature DB >> 16085679

Measuring surface potential components necessary for transmembrane current computation using microfabricated arrays.

J James Wiley1, Raymond E Ideker, William M Smith, Andrew E Pollard.   

Abstract

This study was designed to test the feasibility of using microfabricated electrodes to record surface potentials with sufficiently fine spatial resolution to measure the potential gradients necessary for improved computation of transmembrane current density. To assess that feasibility, we recorded unipolar electrograms from perfused rabbit right ventricular free wall epicardium (n = 6) using electrode arrays that included 25-microm sensors fabricated onto a flexible substrate with 75-microm interelectrode spacing. Electrode spacing was therefore on the size scale of an individual myocyte. Signal conditioning adjacent to the sensors to control lead noise was achieved by routing traces from the electrodes to the back side of the substrate where buffer amplifiers were located. For comparison, recordings were also made using arrays built from chloridized silver wire electrodes of either 50-microm (fine wire) or 250-microm (coarse wire) diameters. Electrode separations were necessarily wider than with microfabricated arrays. Comparable signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) of 21.2 +/- 2.2, 32.5 +/- 4.1, and 22.9 +/- 0.7 for electrograms recorded using microfabricated sensors (n = 78), fine wires (n = 78), and coarse wires (n = 78), respectively, were found. High SNRs were maintained in bipolar electrograms assembled using spatial combinations of the unipolar electrograms necessary for the potential gradient measurements and in second-difference electrograms assembled using spatial combinations of the bipolar electrograms necessary for surface Laplacian (SL) measurements. Simulations incorporating a bidomain representation of tissue structure and a two-dimensional network of guinea pig myocytes prescribed following the Luo and Rudy dynamic membrane equations were completed using 12.5-microm spatial resolution to assess contributions of electrode spacing to the potential gradient and SL measurements. In those simulations, increases in electrode separation from 12.5 to 75.0, 237.5, and 875.0 microm, which were separations comparable to the finest available with our microfabricated, fine wire, and coarse wire arrays, led to 10%, 42%, and 81% reductions in maximum potential gradients and 33%, 76%, and 96% reductions in peak-to-peak SLs. Maintenance of comparable SNRs for source electrograms was therefore important because microfabrication provides a highly attractive methods to achieve spatial resolutions necessary for improved computation of transmembrane current density.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16085679     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00570.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6135            Impact factor:   4.733


  3 in total

1.  Quantification of transmembrane currents during action potential propagation in the heart.

Authors:  Richard A Gray; David N Mashburn; Veniamin Y Sidorov; John P Wikswo
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2013-01-08       Impact factor: 4.033

2.  Transmembrane current imaging in the heart during pacing and fibrillation.

Authors:  Richard A Gray; David N Mashburn; Veniamin Y Sidorov; Bradley J Roth; Pras Pathmanathan; John P Wikswo
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2013-10-01       Impact factor: 4.033

Review 3.  Electrogram recording and analyzing techniques to optimize selection of target sites for ablation of cardiac arrhythmias.

Authors:  Jacques Mt de Bakker
Journal:  Pacing Clin Electrophysiol       Date:  2019-11-18       Impact factor: 1.976

  3 in total

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