High-density and high coverage composite mapping of repetitive atrial activation patterns

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Repetitive atrial activation patterns (RAAPs) during atrial fibrillation (AF) may be associated with localized mechanisms that maintain AF. Current electro-anatomical mapping systems are unsuitable for analyzing RAAPs due to the trade-off between spatial coverage and electrode density in clinical catheters. This work proposes a technique to overcome this trade-off by constructing composite maps from spatially overlapping sequential recordings. Methods: High-density epicardial contact mapping was performed during open-chest surgery in goats (n=16, left and right atria) with 3 or 22 weeks of sustained AF (249-electrode array, electrode distance 2.4 mm). A dataset mimicking sequential recordings was generated by segmenting the grid into four spatially overlapping regions (each region 6.5 cm2, 48 +/- 10% overlap) without temporal overlap. RAAPs were detected in each region using recurrence plots of activation times. RAAPs in two different regions were joined in case of RAAP cross-recurrence between overlapping electrodes. We quantified the reconstruction success rate and quality of the composite maps. Results: Of 1021 RAAPs found in the full mapping array (32 +/- 13 per recording), 328 spatiotemporally stable RAAPs were analyzed. 247 composite maps were generated (75% success) with a quality of 0.86 +/- 0.21 (Pearson correlation). Success was significantly affected by the RAAP area. Quality was weakly correlated with the number of repetitions of RAAPs (r=0.13, p<0.05) and not affected by the atrial side (left or right) or AF duration (3 or 22 weeks of AF). Conclusions: Constructing composite maps by combining spatially overlapping sequential recordings is feasible. Interpretation of these maps can play a central role in ablation planning.
Original languageEnglish
Article number106920
Number of pages9
JournalComputers in Biology and Medicine
Volume159
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2023

Keywords

  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Conduction patterns
  • High -density epicardial atrial mapping
  • Sequential mapping
  • Repetitive activation patterns
  • Recurrence plots
  • CATHETER ABLATION
  • FIBRILLATION
  • PERSISTENT
  • RESOLUTION
  • MECHANISM

Cite this