Three-Dimensional Cardiac Electrical Imaging From Intracavity Recordings
Bin He
Chenguang Liu
Yingchun Zhang
Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis;
This paper appears in: Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publication Date: Aug. 2007
Volume: 54,
Issue: 8
On page(s): 1454-1460
ISSN: 0018-9294
INSPEC Accession Number: 9606689
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/TBME.2007.891932
Current Version Published: 2007-07-16
Abstract
A novel approach is proposed to image 3-D cardiac electrical activity from intracavity electrical recordings with the aid of a catheter. The feasibility and performance were evaluated by computer simulation studies, where a 3-D cellular-automaton heart model and a finite-element thorax volume conductor model were utilized. The finite-element method (FEM) was used to simulate the intracavity recordings induced by a single-site and dual-site pacing protocol. The 3-D ventricular activation sequences as well as the locations of the initial activation sites were inversely estimated by minimizing the dissimilarity between the intracavity potential ldquomeasurementsrdquo and the model-generated intracavity potentials. Under single-site pacing, the relative error (RE) between the true and estimated activation sequences was and the localization error (LE) (of the initiation site) was mm, as averaged over 12 pacing trials when considering 25 muV additive measurement noise using 64 catheter electrodes. Under dual-site pacing, the RE was over 12 pacing trials and the LE over 24 initial pacing sites was mm, when considering 25 muV additive measurement noise using 64 catheter electrodes. The proposed 3-D cardiac electrical imaging approach using intracavity electrical recordings was also tested under various simulated conditions and robust inverse solutions obtained. The present promising simulation results suggest the feasibility of obtaining 3-D information of cardiac electrical activity from intracavity recordings. The application of this inverse method has the potential of enhancing electrocardiographic mapping by catheters in electrophysiology laboratories, aiding cardiac resynchronization therapy, and other clinical applications.
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