An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study

Atrial fibrillation is the most common cardiac arrhythmia. Many physicians believe in the hypothesis that persistent atrial fibrillation is maintained by centers of rotatory activity. These so called rotors are sometimes found by physicians during catheter ablation or electrophysiological studies bu...

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Main Authors: Kaltenbacher Wenzel, Rottmann Markus, Dössel Olaf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2016-09-01
Series:Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/cdbme.2016.2.issue-1/cdbme-2016-0038/cdbme-2016-0038.xml?format=INT
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spelling doaj-72000cf7c24f46828911a97a2724b6b72020-11-24T21:07:35ZengDe GruyterCurrent Directions in Biomedical Engineering2364-55042016-09-012116717010.1515/cdbme-2016-0038cdbme-2016-0038An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation studyKaltenbacher Wenzel0Rottmann Markus1Dössel Olaf2Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe, GermanyInstitute of Biomedical Engineering, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe, GermanyInstitute of Biomedical Engineering, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe, GermanyAtrial fibrillation is the most common cardiac arrhythmia. Many physicians believe in the hypothesis that persistent atrial fibrillation is maintained by centers of rotatory activity. These so called rotors are sometimes found by physicians during catheter ablation or electrophysiological studies but there are also physicians who claim that they did not find any rotors at all. One reason might be that today rotors are mainly identified by visual inspection of the data. Thus we are aiming at an algorithm for rotor detection. We first developed an algorithm based on the local activation times of the intracardiac electrograms recorded by a multielectrode catheter that can automatically determine the cycle length coverage. This was done to get an objective view on possible rotors and therefore help to quantify whether a rotor was found or not. The algorithm was developed and evaluated in two different simulation setups, where it could reliably determine cycle length coverage. But we found out that effects like wave collision and slow conduction have strong influence on cycle length coverage. This prevents cycle length coverage from being suited as the only parameter to quantify whether a rotor is present or not. On the other hand we could confirm that rotors imply a cycle length coverage of >70% if the multielectrode catheter is centered in an area of <5 mm away from the rotor tip. Therefore cycle length coverage can at least be used in some situations to exclude the presence of possible rotors.http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/cdbme.2016.2.issue-1/cdbme-2016-0038/cdbme-2016-0038.xml?format=INTatrial fibrillationcatheter ablationcycle length coveragedominant frequencyrotor
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kaltenbacher Wenzel
Rottmann Markus
Dössel Olaf
spellingShingle Kaltenbacher Wenzel
Rottmann Markus
Dössel Olaf
An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study
Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering
atrial fibrillation
catheter ablation
cycle length coverage
dominant frequency
rotor
author_facet Kaltenbacher Wenzel
Rottmann Markus
Dössel Olaf
author_sort Kaltenbacher Wenzel
title An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study
title_short An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study
title_full An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study
title_fullStr An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study
title_full_unstemmed An algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study
title_sort algorithm to automatically determine the cycle length coverage to identify rotational activity during atrial fibrillation – a simulation study
publisher De Gruyter
series Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering
issn 2364-5504
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Atrial fibrillation is the most common cardiac arrhythmia. Many physicians believe in the hypothesis that persistent atrial fibrillation is maintained by centers of rotatory activity. These so called rotors are sometimes found by physicians during catheter ablation or electrophysiological studies but there are also physicians who claim that they did not find any rotors at all. One reason might be that today rotors are mainly identified by visual inspection of the data. Thus we are aiming at an algorithm for rotor detection. We first developed an algorithm based on the local activation times of the intracardiac electrograms recorded by a multielectrode catheter that can automatically determine the cycle length coverage. This was done to get an objective view on possible rotors and therefore help to quantify whether a rotor was found or not. The algorithm was developed and evaluated in two different simulation setups, where it could reliably determine cycle length coverage. But we found out that effects like wave collision and slow conduction have strong influence on cycle length coverage. This prevents cycle length coverage from being suited as the only parameter to quantify whether a rotor is present or not. On the other hand we could confirm that rotors imply a cycle length coverage of >70% if the multielectrode catheter is centered in an area of <5 mm away from the rotor tip. Therefore cycle length coverage can at least be used in some situations to exclude the presence of possible rotors.
topic atrial fibrillation
catheter ablation
cycle length coverage
dominant frequency
rotor
url http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/cdbme.2016.2.issue-1/cdbme-2016-0038/cdbme-2016-0038.xml?format=INT
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