Abstract

Background Electrical activity underlying the T-wave is less well understood than the QRS-complex. This study investigated the relationship between normal T-wave morphology and the underlying ventricular repolarization gradients using the equivalent dipole layer (EDL).Methods Body-surface-potential-maps (BSPM, 67‑leads) were obtained in nine normal cases. Subject specific MRI-based anatomical heart/torso-models with electrode positions were created. The boundary element method was used to account for the volume conductor effects. To simulate the measured T-waves, the EDL was used to apply different ventricular repolarization gradients: a) transmural, b) interventricular c) apico-basal and d) all three gradients (a-c) combined. The combined gradient (d) was optimized using an inverse procedure (Levenberg-Marquardt). Correspondence between simulated and measured T-waves was assessed using correlation coefficient (CC) and relative difference (RD).Results Realistic T-waves were simulated if repolarization times of: (a) the epicardium were smaller than the endocardium; (b) the left ventricle were smaller than the right ventricle and (c) the apex increased towards the base. The apico-basal gradient resulted in the highest correspondence between measured and simulated T-waves (CC = 0.84(0.81–0.91);RD = 0.68(0.60–0.71)) compared to a transmural gradient (CC = 0.77(0.71–0.80);RD = 1.46(0.82–1.75)) and an interventricular gradient (CC = 0.71(0.67–0.80);RD = 0.85(0.75–0.87)). All three gradients combined further improved the correspondence between measured and simulated T-waves (CC = 0.83(0.82–0.89);RD = 0.60(0.51–0.63)), especially after optimization (CC = 0.96(0.94–0.98);RD = 0.27(0.22–0.34)).Conclusion The application of all repolarization gradients combined resulted in the largest agreement between simulated and measured T-waves, followed by the apico-basal repolarization gradient. With these findings, we will optimize our EDL-based inverse procedure to assess repolarization abnormalities.

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