Literature DB >> 17993317

Noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging of arrhythmogenesis: insights from modeling and human studies.

Raja N Ghanem1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sudden cardiac death remains the leading cause of death, claiming more than 1000 lives per day in the United States alone. Noninvasive means to diagnose rhythm disorders of the heart have relied heavily on the 12-lead electrocardiogram and, to a lesser extent, on higher-resolution body-surface mapping. These lack sensitivity and specificity due to the smoothing effect of the torso volume conductor. In contrast, noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI) reconstructs potentials, electrograms, and activation sequences directly on the heart surface from body-surface electrocardiograms and has been applied in animal as well as clinical studies. This presentation summarizes the application of ECGI for imaging epicardial arrhythmogenic substrates and associated properties, in particular, dispersion of myocardial repolarization, fractionated electrograms, and heterogeneous multipolar potential distributions.
METHODS: Electrocardiographic imaging was evaluated in a canine model of temperature-induced dispersion of myocardial repolarization through localized warming and cooling and in 3 patients with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (>or=50%) undergoing open heart surgery. Noninvasively reconstructed epicardial potentials, electrograms (and derived measures), as well as activation sequences were compared with their measured counterparts.
RESULTS: Epicardial measures of dispersion of repolarization (activation recovery intervals [ARIs] and QRST integrals) accurately reflected the underlying repolarization properties: prolonged ARIs and increased QRST (warming), shortened ARIs and decreased QRST (cooling), and gradients of adjacent prolonged and shortened ARIs (increased and decreased QRST) during simultaneous warming and cooling. In open-heart surgery patients, ECGI reflected the underlying arrhythmogenic substrate by noninvasively reconstructing fractionated electrograms (cross-correlation with measured electrograms = 0.72 +/- 0.25), regions of heterogeneous multipolar potential distributions, and areas of slow conduction.
CONCLUSION: These studies demonstrate that ECGI can capture and localize noninvasively important electrophysiologic properties of the heart. Its clinical significance lies in mapping arrhythmogenic substrates, evaluation and guidance of therapy, and risk stratification.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17993317      PMCID: PMC2128755          DOI: 10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2007.06.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Electrocardiol        ISSN: 0022-0736            Impact factor:   1.438


  25 in total

1.  Electrophysiology and anatomic characterization of an epicardial accessory pathway.

Authors:  J Sapp; K Soejima; G S Couper; W G Stevenson
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol       Date:  2001-12

2.  Imaging dispersion of myocardial repolarization, II: noninvasive reconstruction of epicardial measures.

Authors:  R N Ghanem; J E Burnes; A L Waldo; Y Rudy
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2001-09-11       Impact factor: 29.690

3.  Ablation of epicardial macroreentrant ventricular tachycardia associated with idiopathic nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy by a percutaneous transthoracic approach.

Authors:  Vijendra Swarup; Joseph B Morton; Mauricio Arruda; David J Wilber
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol       Date:  2002-11

4.  Unique topographical distribution of M cells underlies reentrant mechanism of torsade de pointes in the long-QT syndrome.

Authors:  Fadi G Akar; Gan-Xin Yan; Charles Antzelevitch; David S Rosenbaum
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2002-03-12       Impact factor: 29.690

5.  Imaging dispersion of myocardial repolarization, I: comparison of body-surface and epicardial measures.

Authors:  J E Burnes; R N Ghanem; A L Waldo; Y Rudy
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2001-09-11       Impact factor: 29.690

6.  Noninvasive electrocardiogram imaging of substrate and intramural ventricular tachycardia in infarcted hearts.

Authors:  J E Burnes; B Taccardi; P R Ershler; Y Rudy
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2001-12       Impact factor: 24.094

7.  Noninvasive ECG imaging of electrophysiologically abnormal substrates in infarcted hearts : A model study.

Authors:  J E Burnes; B Taccardi; R S MacLeod; Y Rudy
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2000-02-08       Impact factor: 29.690

8.  A noninvasive imaging modality for cardiac arrhythmias.

Authors:  J E Burnes; B Taccardi; Y Rudy
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2000-10-24       Impact factor: 29.690

9.  Noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI): application of the generalized minimal residual (GMRes) method.

Authors:  Charulatha Ramanathan; Ping Jia; Raja Ghanem; Daniela Calvetti; Yoram Rudy
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 3.934

10.  Transmural electrophysiological heterogeneities underlying arrhythmogenesis in heart failure.

Authors:  Fadi G Akar; David S Rosenbaum
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2003-08-21       Impact factor: 17.367

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