Abstract

Designation of the time of local activation is fundamental to electrophysiological mapping. In normal myocardium, the minimum slope in extracellular monopolar (MP) electrograms has been linked through simultaneous intracellular and extracellular recordings to phase 0 of the action potential. However, no similar correlation has been demonstrated for a parameter from bipolar (BP) electrograms, now commonly used during electrophysiological studies and intraoperative mapping. The purpose of this work is to compare the activation time, determined according to several common algorithms applied to BP electrograms, with the time of the minimum slope in MP electrograms. Simultaneous normal epicardial MP and BP electrograms were acquired from subjects undergoing surgery for Wolf-Parkinson-White Syndrome and from dogs. The activation time in BP electrograms was defined by four algorithms: (1) peak (P); (2) greatest absolute slope (S); (3) zero crossing of the segment containing the greatest slope (FZC); and (4) morphological (M). Each was compared to the time of the minimum slope in the simultaneously recorded MP response. The incidence of outliers was tabulated. The distribution of activation times computed using each BP algorithm was statistically different from the distribution of activation times derived from MP electrograms. M performed best (absolute difference: 2.6 +/- 2.9 msec; cor coef: 0.9925 in man). The M, P, FZC, and S algorithms produced 3.2%, 3.5%, 4.7% and 4.7% outliers, respectively. The overall performance of a morphologically based algorithm is superior to simplistic BP algorithms based only on slope or peak.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call