74 research outputs found
A robust wavelet-based approach for dominant frequency analysis of atrial fibrillation in body surface signals
This is an author-created, un-copyedited versíon of an article published in Physiological Measurement. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsíble for any errors or omissíons in this versíon of the manuscript or any versíon derived from it. The Versíon of Record is available online at https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/ab97c1.[EN] Objective: Atrial dominant frequency (DF) maps undergoing atrial fibrillation (AF) presented good
spatial correlation with those obtained with the non-invasive body surface potential mapping
(BSPM). In this study, a robust BSPM-DF calculation method based on wavelet analysis is
proposed. Approach: Continuous wavelet transform along 40 scales in the pseudo-frequency range
of 3¿30 Hz is performed in each BSPM signal using a Gaussian mother wavelet. DFs are estimated
from the intervals between the peaks, representing the activation times, in the maximum energy
scale. The results are compared with the traditionally widely applied Welch periodogram and the
robustness was tested on different protocols: increasing levels of white Gaussian noise, artificial DF
harmonics presence and reduction in the number of leads. A total of 11 AF simulations and 12 AF
patients are considered in the analysis. For each patient, intracardiac electrograms were acquired in
15 locations from both atria. The accuracy of both methods was assessed by calculating the
absolute errors of the highest DFBSPM (HDFBSPM) with respect to the atrial HDF, either simulated
or intracardially measured, and assumed correct if ¿1 Hz. The spatial distribution of the errors
between torso DFs and atrial HDFs were compared with atria driving mechanism locations. Torso
HDF regions, defined as portions of the maps with |DF ¿ HDFBSPM| ¿ 0.5 Hz were identified and
the percentage of the torso occuping these regions was compared between methods. The robustness
of both methods to white Gaussian noise, ventricular influence and harmonics, and to lower spatial
resolution BSPM lead layouts was analyzed: computer AF models (567 leads vs 256 leads down to
16 leads) and patient data (67 leads vs 32 and 16 leads). Main results: The proposed method
allowed an improvement in non-invasive estimation of the atria HDF. For the models the median
relative errors were 7.14% for the wavelet-based algorithm vs 60.00% for the Welch method; in
patients, the errors were 10.03% vs 12.66%, respectively. The wavelet method outperformed the
Welch approach in correct estimations of atrial HDFs in models (81.82% vs 45.45%, respectively)
and patients (66.67% vs 41.67%). A low positive BSPM-DF map correlation was seen between the
techniques (0.47 for models and 0.63 for patients), highlighting the overall differences in DF
distributions. The wavelet-based algorithm was more robust to white Gaussian noise, residual
ventricular activity and harmonics, and presented more consistent results in lead layouts with low
spatial resolution. Significance: Estimation of atrial HDFs using BSPM is improved by the proposed
wavelet-based algorithm, helping to increase the non-invasive diagnostic ability in AF.This study was supported in part by grants from Sao Paulo Research Foundation (2017/19775-3), Instituto de Salud Carlos III FEDER (Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional PI17/01106) and Generalitat Valenciana Grants (AICO/2018/267).Marques, V.; Rodrigo Bort, M.; Guillem Sánchez, MS.; Salinet, J. (2020). A robust wavelet-based approach for dominant frequency analysis of atrial fibrillation in body surface signals. Physiological Measurement. 41(7):1-14. https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/ab97c1S11441
Non-invasive Mechanism Classification and Localization in Supraventricular Cardiac Arrhythmias
[EN] In this study, we investigated the most relevant biomarkers for noninvasive classification and mechanism location in atrial tachycardia (AT), flutter (AFL) and fibrillation (AF). Biomarkers were calculated using noninvasive body surface (BSPM) dominant frequency and phase
maps. We used 19 simulations of 567 to 64-lead BSPMs,
from which were extracted 32 biomarkers. Biomarker
ranking was performed with ANOVA, Kendall and Lasso
techniques. The best four biomarkers were identified and
used to classify the arrhythmias in all combinations, and
the best two used for noninvasive driver localization. Arrhythmia classification accuracy was 94.74%. The feature
combination which best distinguish AF from non-AF were
mean filament displacement and mean OI, while those that
best distinguish AFL from AT were mean and SD of SP
distribution. There was good agreement across ranking
techniques. Mechanism location accuracy was 78.95%,
with the most important biomarkers being percentage SPs
within each torso division, and SD of filament histogram
cluster area. This study highlights that organization related features well identifies AF and spatial SP distribution
discriminate AT from AFL and also it¿s localization.VGM is funded by the European Union's Horizon
2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie
Skodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 860974. IS, JAS
and JS are supported by grant #2018/25606-2, Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP).Sandoval, I.; Marques, VG.; Sims, JA.; Rodrigo, M.; Guillem Sánchez, MS.; Salinet, J. (2021). Non-invasive Mechanism Classification and Localization in Supraventricular Cardiac Arrhythmias. 1-4. https://doi.org/10.22489/CinC.2021.2261
Efeito residual de rochas brasileiras como fertilizantes e corretivos da acidez do solo.
RESUMO: O objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar o efeito residual de rochas brasileiras aplicadas como fertilizantes e corretivos do solo. O experimento foi conduzido em Neossolo Quartarênico cultivado com soja em sucessão ao girassol sob condições de casa de vegetação, em delineamento experimental inteiramente casualizado, com quatro repetições. Os tratamentos consistiram de cinco rochas (brecha alcalina, arenito vulcânico, carbonatito, biotita xisto e ultramáfica alcalina) aplicadas em doses correspondentes ao fornecimento de 150 mg kg-1 de K2O e tendo como referência, a fonte cloreto de potássio considerada como padrão, além de uma testemunha sem K. Os resultados mostraram que exceto a biotita xisto e a brecha alcalina, as rochas apresentaram poder alcalinizante do solo. O arenito vulcânico corrigiu a acidez do solo, mas não é indicado como fonte de K. A aplicação de altas quantidades de rochas ocasiona desbalanço dos nutrientes no solo. ABSTRACT: The objective this work was to evaluate de effect of rocks as fertilizers and soil acidity amendments. The experiment was carried out in an Ustoxic (Neossolo Quartzarênico) cultivated with soybean in succession with sunflower under greenhouse conditions, in an experimental randomized design with four replicates. The treatments consisted of five sources of rocks (alkaline breccia, volcanic sandstone, carbonatite, biotite schist and ultramaphic alkaline). The application of standard potassium closes of 150 mg kg-1 of K2O and the control without treatment. The results showed that rocks displayed soil alkalinizing capacity, except for biotite schist and alkaline breccia. Volcanic sandstone corrected the soil acidity but it is not indicated as source of K, while the application of high amounts of rocks caused unbalance of soil nutrients
Circle Method for Robust Estimation of Local Conduction Velocity High-Density Maps From Optical Mapping Data: Characterization of Radiofrequency Ablation Sites
Conduction velocity (CV) slowing is associated with atrial fibrillation (AF) and reentrant ventricular tachycardia (VT). Clinical electroanatomical mapping systems used to localize AF or VT sources as ablation targets remain limited by the number of measuring electrodes and signal processing methods to generate high-density local activation time (LAT) and CV maps of heterogeneous atrial or trabeculated ventricular endocardium. The morphology and amplitude of bipolar electrograms depend on the direction of propagating electrical wavefront, making identification of low-amplitude signal sources commonly associated with fibrotic area difficulty. In comparison, unipolar electrograms are not sensitive to wavefront direction, but measurements are susceptible to distal activity. This study proposes a method for local CV calculation from optical mapping measurements, termed the circle method (CM). The local CV is obtained as a weighted sum of CV values calculated along different chords spanning a circle of predefined radius centered at a CV measurement location. As a distinct maximum in LAT differences is along the chord normal to the propagating wavefront, the method is adaptive to the propagating wavefront direction changes, suitable for electrical conductivity characterization of heterogeneous myocardium. In numerical simulations, CM was validated characterizing modeled ablated areas as zones of distinct CV slowing. Experimentally, CM was used to characterize lesions created by radiofrequency ablation (RFA) on isolated hearts of rats, guinea pig, and explanted human hearts. To infer the depth of RFA-created lesions, excitation light bands of different penetration depths were used, and a beat-to-beat CV difference analysis was performed to identify CV alternans. Despite being limited to laboratory research, studies based on CM with optical mapping may lead to new translational insights into better-guided ablation therapies
An Analysis of Resting-State Functional Transcranial Doppler Recordings from Middle Cerebral Arteries
Functional transcrannial Doppler (fTCD) is used for monitoring the hemodynamics characteristics of major cerebral arteries. Its resting-state characteristics are known only when considering the maximal velocity corresponding to the highest Doppler shift (so called the envelope signals). Significantly more information about the resting-state fTCD can be gained when considering the raw cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) recordings. In this paper, we considered simultaneously acquired envelope and raw CBFV signals. Specifically, we collected bilateral CBFV recordings from left and right middle cerebral arteries using 20 healthy subjects (10 females). The data collection lasted for 15 minutes. The subjects were asked to remain awake, stay silent, and try to remain thought-free during the data collection. Time, frequency and time-frequency features were extracted from both the raw and the envelope CBFV signals. The effects of age, sex and body-mass index were examined on the extracted features. The results showed that the raw CBFV signals had a higher frequency content, and its temporal structures were almost uncorrelated. The information-theoretic features showed that the raw recordings from left and right middle cerebral arteries had higher content of mutual information than the envelope signals. Age and body-mass index did not have statistically significant effects on the extracted features. Sex-based differences were observed in all three domains and for both, the envelope signals and the raw CBFV signals. These findings indicate that the raw CBFV signals provide valuable information about the cerebral blood flow which can be utilized in further validation of fTCD as a clinical tool. © 2013 Sejdić et al
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Spatiotemporal behaviour of high dominant frequency during persistent atrial fibrillation
Atrial electrograms (EGMs) with high dominant frequency (DF) are believed to represent atrial substrates with periodic activation responsible for the maintenance of persistent atrial fibrillation (persAF). This study aimed to assess the DF spatiotemporal behavior using high density noncontact mapping in persAF. For 8 patients undergoing left atrial (LA) persAF ablation, 2048 noncontact virtual unipolar EGMs were simultaneously collected and after the removal of ventricular far-field activity, Fourier based spectral analysis was used to identify DF on each EGM. Atrial areas with the highest DF (HDF, DF ± 0.25 Hz) were delimited in each frame for all EGMs, creating HDF `clouds'. Cumulative HDF clouds found at each frame were counted in the 3-D LA representation. To further assess the temporal stability of the cloud, the number of EGMs not hosting any HDF was determined for each window over time. The results show the number of occurrences of HDF clouds in the LA. The temporal behavior was analyzed by counting the number of positions on the 3-D representation of the LA not visited by HDF along time. Our results show HDF in persAF is not temporally stable and spatial distribution throughout the atria suggests the existence of driver regions with very rapid and regular activity maintaining AF. Therefore mapping the cumulative HDF might be an interesting strategy for ablation
Propagation of meandering rotors surrounded by areas of high dominant frequency in persistent atrial fibrillation
Background: Identification of arrhythmogenic regions remains a challenge in persistent atrial fibrillation (persAF). Frequency and phase analysis allows identification of potential ablation targets.
Objective: This study aimed to investigate the spatiotemporal association between dominant frequency (DF) and reentrant phase activation areas.
Methods: A total of 8 persAF patients undergoing first-time catheter ablation procedure were enrolled. A noncontact array catheter was deployed into the left atrium (LA) and 2048 atrial fibrillation electrograms (AEGs) were acquired for 15 seconds following ventricular far-field cancellation. DF and phase singularity (PS) points were identified from the AEGs and tracked over consecutive frames. The spatiotemporal correlation of high DF areas and PS points was investigated, and the organization index at the core of high-DF areas was compared with that of their periphery.
Results: The phase maps presented multiple simultaneous PS points that drift over the LA, with preferential locations. Regions displaying higher PS concentration showed a degree of colocalization with DF sites, with PS and DF regions being neighbors in 61.8% and with PS and DF regions overlapping in 36.8% of the time windows. Sites with highest DF showed a greater degree of organization at their core compared with their periphery. After ablation, the PS incidence reduced over the entire LA (36.2% ± 23.2%, P < .05), but especially at the pulmonary veins (78.6% ± 22.2%, P < .05).
Conclusion: Multiple PS points drifting over the LA were identified with their clusters correlating spatially with the DF regions. After pulmonary vein isolation, the PS’s complexity was reduced, which supports the notion that PS sites represent areas of relevance to the atrial substrate
Persistent atrial fibrillation hierarchical activation: from highest DF sites to wave fractionation at the boundaries
Preclinical studies showed a relationship between high dominant frequency areas (HDFA) and wave fractionation, but evidence in patient who atrial fibrillation (AF) persists for long-term periods (persAF) it is not well defined. This study aims to assess the spatiotemporal organization characteristics at HDFAs is persAF and its impact after per standard pulmonary vein isolation (PVI). Eight persAF patients had a non-contact array catheter deployed into the left atrium to collect up to 2048 AF electrograms (AEG) for 15 s. AEGs were band-pass filtered (3-30 Hz) followed by ventricular farfield cancellation. DF between 4-10 Hz and its respective organization index (OI) were calculated (4 s with 50% overlap) to produce 3D DF and OI maps. HDFA defined as the regions within a 0.25 Hz drop from the highest DF were determined and their centre of gravity (CG) calculated. Highest DF sites showed a higher OI at their core when compared to the periphery (0.422±0.101 vs. 0.386±0.126, p=0.02) and increased again organization at sites distant from the HDFAs. Similarly, after PVI, OI remained higher as compared to their periphery (0.372±0.026 vs. 0.332±0.036, p=0.22), but with significant lower values when compared with baseline (p<0.0001). PersAF patients showed higher organization in the HDFAs core when compared with its periphery
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Systematic differences of non-invasive dominant frequency estimation compared to invasive dominant frequency estimation in atrial fibrillation
Non-invasive analysis of atrial fibrillation (AF) using body surface mapping (BSM) has gained significant interest, with attempts at interpreting atrial spectro-temporal parameters from body surface signals. As these body surface signals could be affected by properties of the torso volume conductor, this interpretation is not always straightforward. This paper highlights the volume conductor effects and influences of the algorithm parameters for identifying the dominant frequency (DF) from cardiac signals collected simultaneously on the torso and atrial surface. Bi-atrial virtual electrograms (VEGMs) and BSMs were recorded simultaneously for 5 minutes from 10 patients undergoing ablation for persistent AF. Frequency analysis was performed on 4 s segments. DF was defined as the frequency with highest power between 4-10 Hz with and without applying organization index (OI) thresholds. The volume conductor effect was assessed by analyzing the highest DF (HDF) difference of each VEGM HDF against its BSM counterpart. Significant differences in HDF values between intra-cardiac and torso signals could be observed, independent of OI threshold. This difference increases with increasing endocardial HDF (BSM-VEGM median difference from -0.13 Hz for VEGM HDF at 6.25±0.25 Hz to -4.24 Hz at 9.75±0.25 Hz), thereby confirming the theory of the volume conductor effect in real-life situations. Applying an OI threshold strongly affected the BSM HDF area size and location and atrial HDF area location. These results suggest that volume conductor and measurement algorithm effects must be considered for appropriate clinical interpretation
An interactive platform to guide catheter ablation in human persistent atrial fibrillation using dominant frequency, organization and phase mapping
Background and Objective: Optimal targets for persistent atrial fibrillation (persAF) ablation are still debated. Atrial regions hosting high dominant frequency (HDF) are believed to participate in the initiation and maintenance of persAF and hence are potential targets for ablation, while rotor ablation has shown promising initial results. Currently, no commercially available system offers the capability to automatically identify both these phenomena. This paper describes an integrated 3D software platform combining the mapping of both frequency spectrum and phase from atrial electrograms (AEGs) to help guide persAF ablation in clinical cardiac electrophysiological studies.
Methods: 30 s of 2048 non-contact AEGs (EnSite Array, St. Jude Medical) were collected and analyzed per patient. After QRST removal, the AEGs were divided into 4 s windows with a 50% overlap. Fast Fourier transform was used for DF identification. HDF areas were identified as the maximum DF to 0.25 Hz below that, and their centers of gravity (CGs) were used to track their spatiotemporal movement. Spectral organization measurements were estimated. Hilbert transform was used to calculate instantaneous phase.
Results: The system was successfully used to guide catheter ablation for 10 persAF patients. The mean processing time was 10.4 ± 1.5 min, which is adequate comparing to the normal electrophysiological (EP) procedure time (120∼180 min).
Conclusions: A customized software platform capable of measuring different forms of spatiotemporal AEG analysis was implemented and used in clinical environment to guide persAF ablation. The modular nature of the platform will help electrophysiological studies in understanding of the underlying AF mechanisms
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