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Epicardial ECG mapping of human ventricular fibrillation

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CPD This content can contribute towards your Continuing Professional Development (CPD) as part of the IET's CPD Monitoring scheme.
Conference
  • Session
  • Wednesday, 19 July 2006
  • 00:19 - 00:19
  • Duration: 18 mins
  • Publication date: 19 Jul 2006
  • Location: IETTV_Room, IETTV_Venue, Glasgow, United Kingdom
  • Part of event 3rd International Conference MEDSIP 2006 Advances in Medical, Signal and Information Processing

About the session

Although the mechanisms of ventricular fibrillation (VF) have been studied extensively in animal hearts, relatively few studies have investigated VF in the human heart. The aim of this study was to record epicardial activity during early human VF and analyse the electrical signals in order to characterise the complexity of activity and to estimate the number of reentrant sources driving the VF. In 10 patients undergoing routine cardiac surgery, VF was induced by burst pacing and a 20-40 s episode of fibrillatory activity was recorded from a dense array of unipolar electrodes spanning the entire epicardium. Dominant frequencies were computed using the fast Fourier transform. Activation times were computed at the minimum negative slopes of the electrograms. Phase singularities and activation wavefronts were identified and quantified. We found that early human VF was typically sustained by a small number of re-entrant sources that were associated with large and coherent wavefronts. However, at times we also observed a large number of small wavefronts. Our results suggest that multiple electrophysiological mechanisms sustain VF in the human heart

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Communications

Communications

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  • AM

    Ayman Mourad

    University of Auckland, Inst. of Bioengineering

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