1. Scar voltage threshold determination using ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging integration in a porcine infarct model: Influence of interelectrode distances and three-dimensional spatial effects of scar
- Author
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Tung, Roderick, Kim, Steve, Yagishita, Daigo, Vaseghi, Marmar, Ennis, Daniel B, Ouadah, Sarah, Ajijola, Olujimi A, Bradfield, Jason S, Mahapatra, Srijoy, Finn, Paul, and Shivkumar, Kalyanam
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Biomedical Imaging ,Animals ,Cicatrix ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Electrophysiologic Techniques ,Cardiac ,Imaging ,Three-Dimensional ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Myocardial Infarction ,Myocardium ,Swine ,Tachycardia ,Ventricular ,Electroanatomic mapping ,Bipolar ,Unipolar ,Voltage threshold ,Ventricular scar ,Infarct ,Porcine ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Biomedical Engineering ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundStudies analyzing optimal voltage thresholds for scar detection with electroanatomic mapping frequently lack a gold standard for comparison.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to use a porcine infarct model with ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) integration to characterize the relationship between interelectrode spacing and bipolar voltage thresholds and examine the influence of 3-dimensional scar on unipolar voltages.MethodsThirty-two combined endocardial-epicardial electroanatomic maps were created in 8 postinfarct porcine subjects (bipolar 2-mm, 5-mm, and 8-mm interelectrode spacing and unipolar) for comparison with ex vivo MRI. Two thresholds were compared: (1) 95% normal distribution and (2) best fit to MRI. Direct electrogram analysis was performed in regions across from MRI-defined scar and adjacent to scar border zone.ResultsA linear increase in optimal thresholds was observed with wider bipole spacing. The 95% thresholds for scar were lower than MRI-matched thresholds with moderate sensitivity for nontransmural scar (54% endo, 63% epi). Unipolar endocardial scar area exceeded MRI-defined scar, resulting in mismatched false scar in 5 of 8 (63%). Endocardial and epicardial unipolar voltages were lower than normal in regions adjacent and across from scar.ConclusionVariations in interelectrode spacing necessitate tailored bipolar voltage thresholds to optimize scar detection. Statistical 95% thresholds appear to be conservative and not fully sensitive for the detection of scar defined by high-resolution ex vivo MRI. In the presence of endocardial scar, unipolar mapping to quantitatively characterize epicardial scar may be overly sensitive due to 3-dimensional spatial averaging.
- Published
- 2016