Abstract

BackgroundElectrophysiological mapping of ventricular tachycardia (VT) is tedious and poorly reproducible. Substrate analysis on imaging cannot explicitly display VT circuits. ObjectivesThis study sought to introduce a computed tomography–based model personalization approach, allowing for the simulation of postinfarction VT in a clinically compatible time frame. MethodsIn 10 patients (age 65 ± 11 years, 9 male) referred for post-VT ablation, computed tomography–derived wall thickness maps were registered to 25 electroanatomical maps (sinus rhythm, paced, and VT). The relationship between wall thickness and electrophysiological characteristics (activation-recovery interval) was analyzed. Wall thickness was then employed to parameterize a fast and tractable organ-scale wave propagation model. Pacing protocols were simulated from multiple sites to test VT induction in silico. In silico VTs were compared to VT circuits mapped clinically. ResultsClinically, 6 different VTs could be induced with detailed maps in 9 patients. The proposed model allowed for fast simulation (median: 6 min/pacing site). Simulations of steady pacing (600 milliseconds) from 100 different sites/patient never triggered any arrhythmia. Applying S1-S2 or S1-S2-S3 induction schemes allowed for the induction of in silico VTs in the 9 of 10 patients who were clinically inducible. The patient who was not inducible clinically was also noninducible in silico. A total of 42 different VTs were simulated (4.2 ± 2 per patient). Six in silico VTs matched a VT circuit mapped clinically. ConclusionsThe proposed framework allows for personalized simulations in a matter of hours. In 6 of 9 patients, simulations show re-entrant patterns matching intracardiac recordings.

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