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Ultra‐rapid high‐density mapping system with the phase singularity technique is feasible in identifying rotors and focal sources and predicting AF termination
Author(s) -
Vicera Jennifer Jeanne B.,
Lo LiWei,
Shinya Yamada,
Chou YuHui,
Lin YennJiang,
Lo MenTzung,
Lin WeiLun,
Liu ShinHuei,
Cheng WenHan,
Tsai TsungYing,
Chen ShihAnn
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.193
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1540-8167
pISSN - 1045-3873
DOI - 10.1111/jce.13952
Subject(s) - medicine , atrial fibrillation , catheter ablation , fractionation , similarity (geometry) , waveform , ablation , biomedical engineering , cardiology , nuclear medicine , computer science , artificial intelligence , chromatography , telecommunications , radar , chemistry , image (mathematics)
Phase singularity (PS) mapping provides additional insight into the AF mechanism and is accurate in identifying rotors. The study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of PS mapping in identifying AF rotors using data obtained from an automatic ultra‐rapid high‐resolution mapping system with a high‐density mini‐basket catheter. Methods Twenty‐three pigs underwent rapid right atrial (RA) pacing (RAP 480 bpm) for 5 weeks before the experiment. During AF, RA endocardial automatic continuous mappings with a mini‐basket catheter were generated using an automatic ultra‐rapid mapping system. Both fractionation mapping and waveform similarity measurements using a PS mapping algorithm were applied on the same recording signals to localize substrates maintaining AF. Results Seventeen (74%) pigs developed sustained AF after RAP. Three were excluded because of periprocedural ventricular arrhythmia and corrupted digital data. RA fractionation maps were acquired with 6.17 ± 4.29 minutes mean acquisition time, 13768 ± 12698 acquisition points mapped during AF from 581 ± 387 beats. Fractionation mapping identified extensively distributed (66.7%) RA complex fractionated atrial electrogram (CFAE), whereas the nonlinear analysis identified high similarity index (SI > 0.7) parts in limited areas (23.7%). There was an average of 1.67 ± 0.87 SI sites with 0.43 ± 0.76 rotor/focal source/chamber. AF termination occurred in 11/16 (68.75%) AF events in 14 pigs during ablation targeting max CFAE. There was a higher incidence of rotor/focal source at AF termination sites compared with non‐AF termination sites (54.5% vs 0%, P  = 0.011). Conclusions The data obtained from ultra‐rapid high‐density automatic mapping is feasible and effective in identifying AF rotors/focal sources using PS technique, and those critical substrates were closely related to AF procedural termination.

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