Distinctive Patterns of Dominant Frequency Trajectory Behavior in Drug-Refractory Persistent Atrial Fibrillation: Preliminary Characterization of Spatiotemporal Instability
posted on 2015-02-09, 12:18authored byJoão L. Salinet, Jiun H. Tuan, Alastair J. Sandilands, Peter J. Stafford, Fernando S. Schlindwein, Ghulam A. Ng
The role of substrates in the maintenance of persistent atrial fibrillation (persAF) remains poorly understood. The use of dominant frequency (DF) mapping to guide catheter ablation has been proposed as a potential strategy, but the characteristics of high DF sites have not been extensively studied. This study aimed to assess the DF spatiotemporal stability using high density noncontact mapping (NCM) in persAF. Methods and Results: Eight persAF patients were studied using NCM during AF. Ventricular far-field cancellation was performed followed by the calculation of DF using Fast Fourier Transform. Analysis of DF stability and spatiotemporal behavior were investigated including characteristics of the highest DF areas (HDFAs). A total of 16,384 virtual electrograms (VEGMs) and 232 sequential high density 3-dimensional DF maps were analyzed. The percentage of DF stable points decreased rapidly over time. Repetition or reappearance of DF values were noted in some instances, occurring within 10 seconds in most cases. Tracking the HDFAs’ center of gravity revealed 3 types of propagation behavior, namely (i) local, (ii) cyclical, and (iii) chaotic activity, with the former 2 patterns accounting for most of the observed events. Conclusions: DF of individual VEGMs was temporally unstable, although reappearance of DF values occurred at times. Hence, targeting sites of ‘peak DF’ from a single time frame is unlikely to be a reliable ablation strategy. There appears to be a predominance of local and cyclical activity of HDFAs hinting a potentially nonrandom temporally periodic behavior that provides further mechanistic insights into the maintenance of persAF.
Funding
J. Salinet is supported by CNPq-Brazil, process no. 200598/2009–0. F. Schlindwein gratefully acknowledges financial support from the IPEM, Santander, and University of Leicester, UK, and G. Ng acknowledges research grant support from St. Jude Medical, Inc.
G. Ng has consultancy agreement and has received fellowship support and speakers’ honorarium from St. Jude Medical. A. Sandilands and P. Stafford have consultancy agreement and have received speakers’ honorarium from St. Jude Medical.
History
Citation
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology, 2013, 25 (4), pp. 371-379 (9)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Engineering