Abstract

In this study we applied both linear and nonlinear spatial correlation measures to characterize epicardial activation patterns of sustained atrial fibrillation in instrumented conscious goats. It was investigated if nonlinearity was involved in the spatial coupling of atrial regions and to what extent fibrillation was organized in the experimental model of sustained atrial fibrillation (AF) in instrumented goats. Data were collected in five goats during experiments to convert AF by continuous infusion of cibenzoline. Spatial organization during AF was quantified with the linear spatial cross correlation function and the nonlinear spatial cross redundancy which was calculated using the Grassberger-Procaccia correlation integral. Two different types of correlation were evaluated to distinguish simultaneous interaction from non-simultaneous interaction, for instance resulting from propagation of fibrillation waves. The nonlinear association length and the linear correlation length were estimated along the principal axes of iso-correlation contours in two-dimensional correlation maps of the nonlinear spatial redundancy and the linear spatial correlation function, respectively. To quantitatively assess the degree of nonlinearity, the association length was also estimated from the linearized spatial redundancy using multivariate surrogate data. The differences between the nonlinear and linearized association lengths indicated that a nonlinear component in the spatial organization of AF predominantly existed in the right atrium. The degree of organization characterized by association length along the short principal axis was higher in the right atrium (15 ± 7 mm) than in the left atrium (8 ± 4 mm). The spatial extension of coherent atrial patches was estimated from a surface of association equal to the area spanned by the principal axes of iso-correlation contours from the redundancy, including the effects from non-simultaneous interaction. Interpreting this area as the spatial domain of a fibrillation wavelet, the results suggest that the mapped region was activated on average by two wavelets in the left atrium and by one wavelet in the right atrium. Therefore, the activation pattern of sustained AF in goats was relatively organized, consistent with type II of AF. It is suggested that the surface of association is a measure of the number of independent wavelets present in the atria during sustained AF, and that larger association lengths result from fewer and larger reentrant circuits.

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