| Literature DB >> 26835035 |
Ashok J Shah1, Meleze Hocini1, Patrizio Pascale1, Laurent Roten1, Yuki Komatsu1, Matthew Daly1, Khaled Ramoul1, Arnaud Denis1, Nicolas Derval1, Frederic Sacher1, Remi Dubois1, Ryan Bokan2, Sandra Eliatou2, Maria Strom2, Charu Ramanathan2, Pierre Jais1, Philippe Ritter1, Michel Haissaguerre1.
Abstract
The authors describe a novel three-dimensional, 252-lead electrocardiography (ECG) and computed tomography (CT)-based non-invasive cardiac imaging and mapping modality. This technique images potentials, electrograms and activation sequences (isochrones) on the epicardial surface of the heart. This tool has been investigated in the normal cardiac electrophysiology and various tachyarrhythmic, conduction and anomalous depo-repolarisation disorders. The clinical application of this system includes a wide range of electrical disorders like atrial arrhythmias (premature atrial beat, atrial tachycardia, atrial fibrillation), ventricular arrhythmias (premature ventricular beat, ventricular tachycardia) and ventricular pre-excitation (Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome). In addition, the system has been used in exploring abnormalities of the His-Purkinje conduction like the bundle branch block and intraventricular conduction disturbance and thereby useful in electrically treating the associated heart failure (cardiac resynchronisation). It has a potential role in furthering our understanding of abnormalities of ventricular action potential (depolarisation [Brugada syndrome and repolarisation], long QT and early repolarisation syndromes) and in evaluating the impact of drugs on His-Purkinje conduction and cardiac action potential.Entities:
Keywords: Body surface mapping; arrhythmia sources; electrocardiographic imaging; electrocardiomapping; non-invasive mapping
Year: 2013 PMID: 26835035 PMCID: PMC4711575 DOI: 10.15420/aer.2013.2.1.16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arrhythm Electrophysiol Rev ISSN: 2050-3369