The localization of atrial fibrillation (AF) driver sources, characterized by rapid and regular electrical activity, is crucial for an effective ablation treatment. This work proposes a double-criteria approach for the identification of AF drivers based on a time-domain evaluation of atrial rate and AF organization. These two features are quantified by the measurement of atrial cycle length (ACL) and wave-similarity (WS). Based on ACL/WS formalism, AF drivers can be operatively defined as sites displaying electrical activity with high-rate and high-similarity (HR AND HS). The capability of ACL/WS analysis to identify AF driver sites and distinguish them from non-critical areas is shown in representative examples. The double-criteria evaluation for the identification of AF drivers, provided by our time-domain approach, might open new perspectives for the development of electrogram-guided ablation strategies in the single patient.
A time-domain approach for the identification of atrial fibrillation drivers / Ravelli, F; Masè, M. - (2011), pp. 5527-5530. (Intervento presentato al convegno - tenutosi a - nel -) [10.1109/IEMBS.2011.6091410].
A time-domain approach for the identification of atrial fibrillation drivers
Ravelli, F;Masè, M
2011-01-01
Abstract
The localization of atrial fibrillation (AF) driver sources, characterized by rapid and regular electrical activity, is crucial for an effective ablation treatment. This work proposes a double-criteria approach for the identification of AF drivers based on a time-domain evaluation of atrial rate and AF organization. These two features are quantified by the measurement of atrial cycle length (ACL) and wave-similarity (WS). Based on ACL/WS formalism, AF drivers can be operatively defined as sites displaying electrical activity with high-rate and high-similarity (HR AND HS). The capability of ACL/WS analysis to identify AF driver sites and distinguish them from non-critical areas is shown in representative examples. The double-criteria evaluation for the identification of AF drivers, provided by our time-domain approach, might open new perspectives for the development of electrogram-guided ablation strategies in the single patient.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione