DocumentCode
972054
Title
A Method for Guiding Ablation Catheters to Arrhythmogenic Sites Using Body Surface Electrocardiographic Signals
Author
Barley, Maya E. ; Armoundas, Antonis A. ; Cohen, Richard J.
Author_Institution
Div. of Health Sci. & Technol., Harvard-Massachusetts Inst. of Technol. (MIT), Cambridge, MA
Volume
56
Issue
3
fYear
2009
fDate
3/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
810
Lastpage
819
Abstract
Treatment of hemodynamically unstable ventricular arrhythmias requires rapid and accurate localization of the reentrant circuit. We have previously described an algorithm that uses the single-equivalent moving dipole model to rapidly identify both the location of cardiac sources from body surface electrocardiographic signals and the location of the ablation catheter tip from current pulses delivered at the tip. However, during catheter ablation, in the presence of sources of systematic error, even if the exit site and catheter tip dipole are superposed in real space, their calculated positions may be separated by as much as 5 mm if their orientations are not exactly matched. In this study, we present a method to compensate for the effect of dipole orientation and examine the method´s ability to guide a dipole at a catheter tip to an arrhythmogenic dipole corresponding to the exit site. In computer simulations, we show that the new method enables the user to guide the catheter tip to within 1.5 mm of the arrhythmogenic dipole using a realistic number of movements of the ablation catheter. These results suggest that this method has the potential to greatly facilitate RF ablation procedures, especially in the significant patient population with hemodynamically unstable arrhythmias.
Keywords
catheters; diseases; electrocardiography; haemodynamics; radiation therapy; ablation catheters; arrhythmogenic sites; body surface electrocardiographic signals; hemodynamically unstable ventricular arrhythmias; reentrant circuit; single-equivalent moving dipole model; Bioelectric phenomena; Cardiac disease; Cardiology; Cardiovascular diseases; Catheters; Circuits; Computer simulation; Heart; Materials science and technology; Radio frequency; Signal processing; Surface reconstruction; Surface treatment; Catheter ablation; equivalent moving dipole; ventricular tachycardia (VT); Algorithms; Arrhythmias, Cardiac; Body Surface Potential Mapping; Catheter Ablation; Chi-Square Distribution; Computer Simulation; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Humans; Models, Anatomic; Normal Distribution; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2008.2006277
Filename
4663617
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