| Literature DB >> 26497659 |
Ameeta Yaksh1, Lisette J M E van der Does1, Charles Kik2, Paul Knops1, Frans B S Oei2, Pieter C van de Woestijne2, Jos A Bekkers2, Ad J J C Bogers2, Maurits A Allessie3, Natasja M S de Groot4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: A new technique is demonstrated for extensive high-resolution intra-operative atrial mapping that will facilitate the localization of atrial fibrillation (AF) sources and identification of the substrate perpetuating AF.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; Electrophysiology; Epicardial mapping technique; Technical report
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26497659 PMCID: PMC4641159 DOI: 10.1007/s10840-015-0061-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interv Card Electrophysiol ISSN: 1383-875X Impact factor: 1.900
Fig. 1A pacemaker wire stitched to the right atrial free wall serving as a temporal reference electrode (top). A steal wire fixed to (sub)cutaneous tissue serving as the indifferent electrode (bottom). RA right atrium, RV right ventricle
Fig. 2Mapping array containing 192 unipolar electrodes (top left). Examples of recorded electrograms at proximal, middle and distal electrodes of the array (top right). Mapping array and the identically shaped steel spatula (bottom)
Fig. 3The electrode array placed between the pulmonary veins in the oblique sinus (top) and on the right atrial wall (bottom) during recording of epicardial electrograms
Fig. 4Mapping scheme demonstrating positions of the 192-electrode array on a 3D model. The left and right atria are covered by four positions each; to reach Bachmann’s bundle, the array is placed within the transverse sinus between the aorta and superior vena cava
Fig. 5Mapping of induced vs long-standing persistent AF. Intra-atrial variation in various electrophysiological parameters measured during 10 s of AF, including dominant frequency (blue <6 Hz, white 6–7 Hz, red >7 Hz), number of fibrillation waves (blue<2 /cm2/s, white 3–4 /cm2/s, red >3 /cm2/s), number of focal waves (blue <1 /cm2/s, white 1–4 /cm2/s, red >4 /cm2/s), irregularity (blue <20 ms, white 20–50 ms, red >50 ms), conduction velocity (blue ≥70 cm/s, white 51–69 cm/s, red ≤50 cm/s) and incidence of slow conduction and block (red >25 %, white 6–25 %, blue ≤6 %). See text for further description. a Mapping of induced AF in a patient with coronary artery disease. b Mapping of long-standing persistent AF in a patient with mitral valve insufficiency