4.7 Article

Transmural Imaging of Ventricular Action Potentials and Post-Infarction Scars in Swine Hearts

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 731-747

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMI.2012.2236567

Keywords

Bayesian estimation; electroanatomical mapping; inverse problem of electrocardiography; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); post-infarction scar; transmural electrophysiological imaging

Funding

  1. RIT GCCIS
  2. RIT GCCIS FEAD Award
  3. SUTD-ZJU Collaboration Research Grant [2012 SUTD-ZJU/RES/03/2012]
  4. National Basic Research Program of China [2010CB732504]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61271083]
  6. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LR12F03001]

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The problem of using surface data to reconstruct transmural electrophysiological (EP) signals is intrinsically ill-posed without a unique solution in its unconstrained form. Incorporating physiological spatiotemporal priors through probabilistic integration of dynamic EP models, we have previously developed a Bayesian approach to transmural electrophysiological imaging (TEPI) using body-surface electrocardiograms. In this study, we generalize TEPI to using electrical signals collected from heart surfaces, and we test its feasibility on two pre-clinical swine models provided through the STACOM 2011 EP simulation Challenge. Since this new application of TEPI does not require whole-body imaging, there may be more immediate potential in EP laboratories where it could utilize catheter mapping data and produce transmural information for therapy guidance. Another focus of this study is to investigate the consistency among three modalities in delineating scar after myocardial infarction: TEPI, electroanatomical voltage mapping (EAVM), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Our preliminary data demonstrate that, compared to the low-voltage scar area in EAVM, the 3-D electrical scar volume detected by TEPI is more consistent with anatomical scar volume delineated in MRI. Furthermore, TEPI could complement anatomical imaging by providing EP functional features related to both scar and healthy tissue.

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