Abstract

We investigated a novel sparsity-based regularization method in the wavelet domain of the inverse problem of electrocardiography that aims at preserving the spatiotemporal characteristics of heart-surface potentials. In three normal, anesthetized dogs, electrodes were implanted around the epicardium and body-surface electrodes were attached to the torso. Potential recordings were obtained simultaneously on the body surface and on the epicardium. A CT scan was used to digitize a homogeneous geometry which consisted of the body-surface electrodes and the epicardial surface. A novel multitask elastic-net-based method was introduced to regularize the ill-posed inverse problem. The method simultaneously pursues a sparse wavelet representation in time-frequency and exploits correlations in space. Performance was assessed in terms of quality of reconstructed epicardial potentials, estimated activation and recovery time, and estimated locations of pacing, and compared with performance of Tikhonov zeroth-order regularization. Results in the wavelet domain obtained higher sparsity than those in the time domain. Epicardial potentials were non-invasively reconstructed with higher accuracy than with Tikhonov zeroth-order regularization (p < 0.05), and recovery times were improved (p < 0.05). No significant improvement was found in terms of activation times and localization of origin of pacing. Next to improved estimation of recovery isochrones, which is important when assessing substrate for cardiac arrhythmias, this novel technique opens potentially powerful opportunities for clinical application, by allowing to choose wavelet bases that are optimized for specific clinical questions.Graphical The inverse problem of electrocardiography is to reconstruct heart-surface potentials from recorded bodysurface electrocardiograms (ECGs) and a torso-heart geometry. However, it is ill-posed and solving it requires additional constraints for regularization. We introduce a regularization method that simultaneously pursues a sparse wavelet representation in time-frequency and exploits correlations in space. Our approach reconstructs epicardial (heart-surface) potentials with higher accuracy than common methods. It also improves the reconstruction of recovery isochrones, which is important when assessing substrate for cardiac arrhythmias. This novel technique opens potentially powerful opportunities for clinical application, by allowing to choose wavelet bases that are optimized for specific clinical questions.

Highlights

  • Heart rhythm disorders are among the leading causes of deaths worldwide

  • Performance of the proposed approach was compared with Tikhonov zeroth-order regularization, one of the most commonly used regularization approaches in the inverse problem of electrocardiography [5, 7]

  • We have introduced a novel method to regularize the inverse problem of electrocardiography

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Summary

Introduction

Electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI) non-1invasively reconstructs potentials, electrograms, and activation/recovery isochrones directly at the heart surface from body-surface potential measurements and a patient-specific torso-heart geometry [5, 7, 33, 34] (see Fig. 1). This is achieved by solving what is known as “the inverse problem of electrocardiography.”. This is achieved by solving what is known as “the inverse problem of electrocardiography.” In the last decades, much progress has been made in ECGI and clinical applications are published with increasing frequency [7]

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