Abstract

Investigate the capacity of MRI to evaluate efficacy of radiofrequency (RF) ablations delivered to MRI-defined arrhythmogenic substrates. Baseline MRI was performed at 3T including 3D LGE in a swine model of chronic myocardial infarct (N=8). MRI-derived maps of scar and heterogeneous tissue channels (HTCs) were generated using ADAS 3D. Animals underwent electroanatomic mapping and ablation of the left ventricle in CARTO3, guided by MRI-derived scar maps. Post-ablation MRI (in vivo at 3T in 5/8 animals; ex vivo at 1.5T in 3/8) included 3D native T1-weighted IR-SPGR (TI=700-800ms) to visualize RF lesions. T1-derived RF lesions were compared against excised tissue. The locations of T1-derived RF lesions were compared against CARTO ablation tags, and segment-wise sensitivity and specificity of lesion detection were calculated within the AHA 17-segment model. RF lesions were clearly visualized in HTCs, scar, and myocardium. Ablation patterns delivered in CARTO matched T1-derived RF lesion patterns with high sensitivity (88.9%) and specificity (94.7%), and were closely matched in registered MR-EP data sets, with a displacement of 5.4 ±3.8mm (N=152 ablation tags). Integrating MRI into ablative procedures for RF lesion assessment is feasible. Patterns of RF lesions created using a standard 3D EAM system are accurately reflected by MRI visualization in healthy myocardium, scar, and HTCs comprising the MRI-defined arrhythmia substrate. MRI visualization of RF lesions can provide near-immediate (<24h) assessment of ablation, potentially indicating whether critical MRI-defined ventricular tachycardia substrates have been adequately ablated.

Full Text
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