Abstract

Potential-based inverse electrocardiography is a method for the noninvasive computation of epicardial potentials from measured body surface electrocardiographic data. From the computed epicardial potentials, epicardial electrograms and isochrones (activation sequences), as well as repolarization patterns can be constructed. We term this noninvasive procedure Electrocardiographic Imaging (ECGI). The method of choice for computing epicardial potentials has been the Boundary Element Method (BEM) which requires meshing the heart and torso surfaces and optimizing the mesh, a very time-consuming operation that requires manual editing. Moreover, it can introduce mesh-related artifacts in the reconstructed epicardial images. Here we introduce the application of a meshless method, the Method of Fundamental Solutions (MFS) to ECGI. This new approach that does not require meshing is evaluated on data from animal experiments and human studies, and compared to BEM. Results demonstrate similar accuracy, with the following advantages: 1. Elimination of meshing and manual mesh optimization processes, thereby enhancing automation and speeding the ECGI procedure. 2. Elimination of mesh-induced artifacts. 3. Elimination of complex singular integrals that must be carefully computed in BEM. 4. Simpler implementation. These properties of MFS enhance the practical application of ECGI as a clinical diagnostic tool.

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