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Electroatriography - Time-frequency analysis of atrial, fibrillation from modified 12-lead ECG configurations for improved diagnosis and therapy

Author

Summary, in English

Current atrial fibrillation (AF) management guidelines suggest that initially a decision must be made to apply either a rate control or rhythm control strategy in the individual patient. However, patients' selection remains substantially empirical and the strategy initially chosen often proves unsuccessful and alternative therapies must be adopted. Thus, it seems desirable to develop and apply tests that quantify AF disease state and guide AF management. The overall hypothesis of this paper is that time-frequency analysis of AF from modified 12-lead ECG configurations will improve AF management beyond current diagnostic and therapeutic standards. In particular, we present a novel concept in which 12-lead ECG configurations are modified for time-frequency analysis of AF (electroatriography). While five electrodes (VR, VL, VF, V1, V2) are placed in the conventional position, the other four electrodes (V3, V4, V5, V6) are empirically repositioned anterior or posterior over the atria. By applying spatiotemporal QRST cancellation and time-frequency analysis to these recordings in 19 patients with persistent AF, fibrillatory rate dispersion among individual anterior (25 14 fibrillations per minute, fpm) and posterior leads (16 +/- 11 fpm) as well as individual anterior/posterior rate gradients ranging between -24 and +116 fpm could be identified. Consequently, the portrayed techniques may form the conceptual basis for individualized noninvasive characterization of AF. Initiation of further studies using the described techniques in different AF subsets, for comparisons with intracardiac recordings and outcome of different therapies, e.g. cardioversion, antiarrhythmic drug and ablation therapy may be stimulated. (c) 2006 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Publishing year

2007

Language

English

Pages

568-573

Publication/Series

Medical Hypotheses

Volume

68

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Churchill Livingstone

Topic

  • Cardiac and Cardiovascular Systems

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1532-2777