Abstract

Inverse electrocardiography (iECG) estimates epi- and endocardial electrical activity from body surface potentials maps (BSPM). In individuals at risk for cardiomyopathy, non-invasive estimation of normal ventricular activation may provide valuable information to aid risk stratification to prevent sudden cardiac death. However, multiple simultaneous activation wavefronts initiated by the His-Purkinje system, severely complicate iECG. To improve the estimation of normal ventricular activation, the iECG method should accurately mimic the effect of the His-Purkinje system, which is not taken into account in the previously published multi-focal iECG. Therefore, we introduce the novel multi-wave iECG method and report on its performance. Multi-wave iECG and multi-focal iECG were tested in four patients undergoing invasive electro-anatomical mapping during normal ventricular activation. In each subject, 67-electrode BSPM were recorded and used as input for both iECG methods. The iECG and invasive local activation timing (LAT) maps were compared. Median epicardial inter-map correlation coefficient (CC) between invasive LAT maps and estimated multi-wave iECG versus multi-focal iECG was 0.61 versus 0.31. Endocardial inter-map CC was 0.54 respectively 0.22. Modeling the His-Purkinje system resulted in a physiologically realistic and robust non-invasive estimation of normal ventricular activation, which might enable the early detection of cardiac disease during normal sinus rhythm.

Highlights

  • Recorded body surface potential maps (BSPM) have a direct relation to the cardiac electrical activity

  • We introduce a model for the His-Purkinje system, the multi-wave inverse electrocardiography (iECG) method, to improve the non-invasive estimation of normal ventricular activation

  • We evaluate the performance of multi-wave iECG is and compare it to the previously described multi-focal iECG using patient specific invasive electro-anatomical mapping (EAM)

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Summary

Introduction

Recorded body surface potential maps (BSPM) have a direct relation to the cardiac electrical activity. The most commonly used method is based on the Equivalent Potential Distribution (EPD) model.[2,29] In this method, the cardiac activation pattern is estimated by solving the mathematical linear relation between the electrical activity on the body surface and the epicardial surface. This method has been adjusted to estimate both endocardial and epicardial activation. EDL-based iECG requires an initial estimate that can be based on ventricular electrophysiology, in contrast to EPD-based iECG.[17,35]

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