TY - JOUR
T1 - Electrocardiographic imaging
T2 - II. Effect of torso inhomogeneities on noninvasive reconstruction of epicardial potentials, electrograms, and isochrones
AU - Ramanathan, Charulatha
AU - Rudy, Yoram
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - Torso Effects on Reconstructed Epicardial Potentials. Introduction: Noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI) involves inverse reconstruction of epicardial potentials, electrograms (EGMs), and isochrones from body surface potential maps (BSPMs). The heart lies in a volume conductor that includes lungs, blood, bone, muscle, and fluid. We investigate the effects of these torso inhomogeneities on reconstructed epicardial potentials, EGMs, and isochrones to address the issue of whether they should be included in clinical ECGI methodology. Methods and Results: Potential data were obtained for different pacing protocols from a dog heart suspended in a human-shaped torso tank. Accurate geometry of torso inhomogeneities was digitized from the Visual Human Project and appropriately introduced into a computer model of the torso. Three models were used: accurate inhomogeneous torso, homogeneous torso, and a torso with stylized lungs (to generate an approximate model). The inhomogeneous model was used to compute BSPMs from the measured epicardial potentials. These BSPMs were the starting point for inverse computations in the different torso models. Epicardial potential maps, EGMs, and isochrones were computed. The homogeneous model produced slightly less accurate epicardial potential reconstructions than the inhomogeneous model and stylized lung model, but epicardial potential patterns, EGMs, isochrones, and locations of pacing sites were reconstructed with comparable accuracy when torso inhomogeneities were ignored. Conclusion: The results demonstrate that, in the clinical application, it is not necessary to include torso inhomogeneities for noninvasive reconstructions of epicardial potentials, EGMs, and activation sequences.
AB - Torso Effects on Reconstructed Epicardial Potentials. Introduction: Noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI) involves inverse reconstruction of epicardial potentials, electrograms (EGMs), and isochrones from body surface potential maps (BSPMs). The heart lies in a volume conductor that includes lungs, blood, bone, muscle, and fluid. We investigate the effects of these torso inhomogeneities on reconstructed epicardial potentials, EGMs, and isochrones to address the issue of whether they should be included in clinical ECGI methodology. Methods and Results: Potential data were obtained for different pacing protocols from a dog heart suspended in a human-shaped torso tank. Accurate geometry of torso inhomogeneities was digitized from the Visual Human Project and appropriately introduced into a computer model of the torso. Three models were used: accurate inhomogeneous torso, homogeneous torso, and a torso with stylized lungs (to generate an approximate model). The inhomogeneous model was used to compute BSPMs from the measured epicardial potentials. These BSPMs were the starting point for inverse computations in the different torso models. Epicardial potential maps, EGMs, and isochrones were computed. The homogeneous model produced slightly less accurate epicardial potential reconstructions than the inhomogeneous model and stylized lung model, but epicardial potential patterns, EGMs, isochrones, and locations of pacing sites were reconstructed with comparable accuracy when torso inhomogeneities were ignored. Conclusion: The results demonstrate that, in the clinical application, it is not necessary to include torso inhomogeneities for noninvasive reconstructions of epicardial potentials, EGMs, and activation sequences.
KW - Body surface potentials
KW - Electrocardiographic imaging
KW - Epicardial potentials
KW - Inverse problem
KW - Mapping
KW - Torso inhomogeneities
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0035112596
U2 - 10.1046/j.1540-8167.2001.00241.x
DO - 10.1046/j.1540-8167.2001.00241.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 11232625
AN - SCOPUS:0035112596
SN - 1045-3873
VL - 12
SP - 241
EP - 252
JO - Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
JF - Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
IS - 2
ER -