| Literature DB >> 28491790 |
Sven Knecht1,2, Florian Spies1,2, David Altmann3, Tobias Reichlin1,2, Christian Sticherling1,2, Michael Kühne1,2.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Activation mapping; Catheter ablation; Electroanatomic mapping; Electrogram; Focal tachycardia
Year: 2016 PMID: 28491790 PMCID: PMC5420056 DOI: 10.1016/j.hrcr.2016.11.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HeartRhythm Case Rep ISSN: 2214-0271
Figure 1Surface electrocardiogram (limb leads) of the atrial tachycardia. The tachycardia shows negative P-waves in the inferior leads (arrows). The asterisks mark 5 sinus beats. After the sinus beats, there are 2 beats with fused P-waves.
Figure 2Bipolar activation map of the right atrium (RA) (A, C) and left atrium (LA) (B) and the combination of both (D). The intracardiac recordings at the different locations are superimposed (white boxes). B: A far-field signal preceding the earliest signal within the LA on ABL 1–2 could be observed. C: Reviewing the automatically annotated signals in the coronary sinus identified double-potential bipolar signals with a wrong automatic annotation (yellow line: -14 ms before CS 5–6) on the second component in the middle of the coronary sinus. Manual reannotation on the first potential (cyan line: -44 ms before CS 5–6) revealed the focal activation originating from the superior-posterior wall. D: Combination of the reannotated map of the RA and the intracardiac signal on the opposite side from within the LA.
KEY TEACHING POINTS
Contemporary 3-dimensional electroanatomic mapping systems play an important role in the current treatment strategies of complex arrhythmias. With the latest generation of hardware and software, a fully automatic high-density mapping of tachycardias is feasible. Despite the technological improvement of these systems, there is currently still the need for a plausibility check when using automatic signal annotation. The system operator still needs adequate training in intracardiac signal annotation. This holds true especially for fractionated or double-potential electrical signals. |