Literature DB >> 16461834

Mechanisms of wave fractionation at boundaries of high-frequency excitation in the posterior left atrium of the isolated sheep heart during atrial fibrillation.

Jérôme Kalifa1, Kazuhiko Tanaka, Alexey V Zaitsev, Mark Warren, Ravi Vaidyanathan, David Auerbach, Sandeep Pandit, Karen L Vikstrom, Robert Ploutz-Snyder, Arkadzi Talkachou, Felipe Atienza, Gérard Guiraudon, José Jalife, Omer Berenfeld.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: High-frequency fractionated electrograms recorded during atrial fibrillation (AF) in the posterior left atrium (PLA) and elsewhere are being used as target sites for catheter ablation. We tested the hypothesis that highly periodic electric waves emerging from AF sources at or near the PLA give rise to the most fractionated activity in adjacent locations. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Sustained AF was induced in 8 isolated sheep hearts (0.5 micromol/L acetylcholine). Endocardial videoimaging (DI-4-ANEPPS) and electric mapping of the PLA enabled spatial characterization of dominant frequencies (DFs) and a regularity index (ratio of DF to total power). Regularity index showed that fractionation was lowest within the area with the maximal DF (DFmax domain; 0.19+/-0.02) and highest within a band of &amp;3 mm (0.16+/-0.02; P=0.047) at boundaries with lower-frequency domains. The numbers of spatiotemporal periodic episodes (25.9+/-2.3) and rotors per experiment (1.9+/-0.7) were also highest within the DFmax domain. Most commonly, breakthrough waves at the PLA traveled toward the rest of the atria (76.8+/-8.1% outward versus 23.2+/-8.1% inward; P<0.01). In both experiments and simulations with an atrial ionic model, fractionation at DFmax boundaries was associated with increased beat-to-beat variability of conduction velocity and directionality with wavebreak formation.
CONCLUSIONS: During stable AF, the PLA harbors regular, fast, and highly organized activity; the outer limit of the DFmax domain is the area where the most propagation pattern variability and fractionated activity occur. These new concepts introduce a new perspective in the clinical use of high-frequency fractionated electrograms to localize sources of AF precisely at the PLA and elsewhere.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16461834     DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.575340

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  92 in total

1.  Frontiers in Non-invasive Cardiac Mapping: Rotors in Atrial Fibrillation-Body Surface Frequency-Phase Mapping.

Authors:  Felipe Atienza; Andreu M Climent; María S Guillem; Omer Berenfeld
Journal:  Card Electrophysiol Clin       Date:  2015-03-01

2.  Evaluation of left atrial lesions after initial and repeat atrial fibrillation ablation: lessons learned from delayed-enhancement MRI in repeat ablation procedures.

Authors:  Troy J Badger; Marcos Daccarett; Nazem W Akoum; Yaw A Adjei-Poku; Nathan S Burgon; Thomas S Haslam; Saul Kalvaitis; Suman Kuppahally; Gaston Vergara; Lori McMullen; Paul A Anderson; Eugene Kholmovski; Rob S MacLeod; Nassir F Marrouche
Journal:  Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol       Date:  2010-03-24

Review 3.  Déjà vu in the theories of atrial fibrillation dynamics.

Authors:  José Jalife
Journal:  Cardiovasc Res       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 10.787

4.  Substrate modification by adding ablation of localized complex fractionated electrograms after stepwise linear ablation in persistent atrial fibrillation.

Authors:  Shiro Nakahara; Tohru Kamijima; Yuichi Hori; Naofumi Tsukada; Akiko Okano; Kan Takayanagi
Journal:  J Interv Card Electrophysiol       Date:  2013-11-30       Impact factor: 1.900

5.  Structural atrial remodeling alters the substrate and spatiotemporal organization of atrial fibrillation: a comparison in canine models of structural and electrical atrial remodeling.

Authors:  Thomas H Everett; Emily E Wilson; Sander Verheule; Jose M Guerra; Scott Foreman; Jeffrey E Olgin
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2006-07-28       Impact factor: 4.733

6.  Conventional pulmonary vein isolation compared with the "box isolation" method: a randomized clinical trial.

Authors:  Karuna Chilukuri; Daniel Scherr; Darshan Dalal; Alan Cheng; David Spragg; Saman Nazarian; Bernadette D Barcelon; Joseph E Marine; Hugh Calkins; Charles A Henrikson
Journal:  J Interv Card Electrophysiol       Date:  2011-05-26       Impact factor: 1.900

7.  Evaluation of the luminal esophageal temperature behavior during left atrium posterior wall ablation by means of second-generation cryoballoon.

Authors:  Thiago Guimarães Osório; Saverio Iacopino; Hugo-Enrique Coutiño; Erwin Ströker; Juan Sieira; Francesca Salghetti; Varnavas Varnavas; Muryo Terasawa; Gaetano Paparella; Lucio Capulzini; Riccardo Maj; Yves De Greef; Pedro Brugada; Carlo de Asmundis; Gian-Battista Chierchia
Journal:  J Interv Card Electrophysiol       Date:  2019-02-07       Impact factor: 1.900

Review 8.  Review on "High-Density Mapping of Atrial Fibrillation in Humans: Relationship Between High-Frequency Activation and Electrogram Fractionation".

Authors:  Yarriv Khaykin
Journal:  J Atr Fibrillation       Date:  2009-02-01

9.  Toward discerning the mechanisms of atrial fibrillation from surface electrocardiogram and spectral analysis.

Authors:  Omer Berenfeld
Journal:  J Electrocardiol       Date:  2010-08-01       Impact factor: 1.438

10.  Causality analysis of leading singular value decomposition modes identifies rotor as the dominant driving normal mode in fibrillation.

Authors:  Yaacov Biton; Avinoam Rabinovitch; Doron Braunstein; Ira Aviram; Katherine Campbell; Sergey Mironov; Todd Herron; José Jalife; Omer Berenfeld
Journal:  Chaos       Date:  2018-01       Impact factor: 3.642

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