TY - JOUR
T1 - Reproducibility and spatial accuracy of magnetocardiographic source localization: a phantom study in an unshielded laboratory for interventional electrophysiology
AU - Lombardi, G.
AU - Sorbo, Anna Rita
AU - Brocca, L. La
AU - Fenici, Riccardo
AU - Brisinda, Donatella
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Background: Pre-interventional knowledge of arrhythmogenic substrate location
may reduce interventional time and risk of cardiac arrhythmias ablation. Magnetocardiographic mapping (MCG) is a contactless method for non-invasive localization of intracardiac sources that has been proposed for three-dimensional (3D)
electro-anatomical imaging (EAI) of focal arrhythmogenic substrates. The aim of
this study was to assess the repeatability, precision, and accuracy of MCG in
localizing dipolar sources when recordings are carried out in an interventional
electrophysiology laboratory, without any electromagnetic shielding. The experimental set-up consisted of a geometrically simplified phantom containing multiple
artificial current dipoles.
Methods: The phantom consisted of a rectangular plastic box filled with 0,9%
NaCl saline solution. Multiple artificial current dipoles (6 mm length, 10mA, 50 Hz)
were sequantially activated within two amagnetic catheters (ACs). The distance
between dipoles was constant (6 mm).
30-seconds MCG (bandwidth DC-200 Hz, 1 KHz sampling rate) were performed,
twice, with 36 DC-SQUID sensors coupled to second-order axial gradiometers
(pick-up coils 19 mm, baselines 55–70 mm), at distances between sensors plane
and dipolar sources (SSD) decreasing from 18 to 9 cm.
Orthogonal fluoroscopic imaging, employing lead markers to correct also for x-ray
divergence effect, was used to define the 3D physical position of each dipole in
respect of the MCG sensors array. MCG repeatability was evaluated calculating
the coefficient of variability (CV) ± standard error of the mean (SEM) of each
parameter.
Localization precision was estimated as the 3D difference between the fluoroscopic position of each artificial dipole and the 3D localization of said dipole provided by MCG inverse solution based on the Equivalent Magnetic Dipole (EMD)
model in a semi-infinite half-space with homogeneous conductivity.
Localization accuracy was defined as the MCG capability to correctly estimate the
distance between two dipoles placed at known distance within the same catheter.
The correlation between precision, goodness of fit (GOF) of the EMD model and
SSD was also analysed.
Results: Overall, optimal repeatability (CV ± SEM = 0,79±0,43%, 3D absolute
error = 0,26±0,25 cm), average localization precision (1,13±0,42 cm) and average
accuracy (0,20±0,13 cm) were found. Localization precision improved (0,87±0,3
cm) with the GOF of the model increasing above 73%, as observed, when SSD
was below 14 cm.
Conclusion: Our data demonstrate that contactless MCG, even if performed in
an unshielded cardiac catheterization laboratory, provides optimal accuracy in localizing dipolar sources embedded in ACs, with uncertainty below a clinical relevant threshold. Thus, with the development of low-cost non-cryogenic technology,
MCG is foreseen as a novel method to be used for both pre-interventional and intraoperative 3D EAI of arrhythmogenic substrates.
AB - Background: Pre-interventional knowledge of arrhythmogenic substrate location
may reduce interventional time and risk of cardiac arrhythmias ablation. Magnetocardiographic mapping (MCG) is a contactless method for non-invasive localization of intracardiac sources that has been proposed for three-dimensional (3D)
electro-anatomical imaging (EAI) of focal arrhythmogenic substrates. The aim of
this study was to assess the repeatability, precision, and accuracy of MCG in
localizing dipolar sources when recordings are carried out in an interventional
electrophysiology laboratory, without any electromagnetic shielding. The experimental set-up consisted of a geometrically simplified phantom containing multiple
artificial current dipoles.
Methods: The phantom consisted of a rectangular plastic box filled with 0,9%
NaCl saline solution. Multiple artificial current dipoles (6 mm length, 10mA, 50 Hz)
were sequantially activated within two amagnetic catheters (ACs). The distance
between dipoles was constant (6 mm).
30-seconds MCG (bandwidth DC-200 Hz, 1 KHz sampling rate) were performed,
twice, with 36 DC-SQUID sensors coupled to second-order axial gradiometers
(pick-up coils 19 mm, baselines 55–70 mm), at distances between sensors plane
and dipolar sources (SSD) decreasing from 18 to 9 cm.
Orthogonal fluoroscopic imaging, employing lead markers to correct also for x-ray
divergence effect, was used to define the 3D physical position of each dipole in
respect of the MCG sensors array. MCG repeatability was evaluated calculating
the coefficient of variability (CV) ± standard error of the mean (SEM) of each
parameter.
Localization precision was estimated as the 3D difference between the fluoroscopic position of each artificial dipole and the 3D localization of said dipole provided by MCG inverse solution based on the Equivalent Magnetic Dipole (EMD)
model in a semi-infinite half-space with homogeneous conductivity.
Localization accuracy was defined as the MCG capability to correctly estimate the
distance between two dipoles placed at known distance within the same catheter.
The correlation between precision, goodness of fit (GOF) of the EMD model and
SSD was also analysed.
Results: Overall, optimal repeatability (CV ± SEM = 0,79±0,43%, 3D absolute
error = 0,26±0,25 cm), average localization precision (1,13±0,42 cm) and average
accuracy (0,20±0,13 cm) were found. Localization precision improved (0,87±0,3
cm) with the GOF of the model increasing above 73%, as observed, when SSD
was below 14 cm.
Conclusion: Our data demonstrate that contactless MCG, even if performed in
an unshielded cardiac catheterization laboratory, provides optimal accuracy in localizing dipolar sources embedded in ACs, with uncertainty below a clinical relevant threshold. Thus, with the development of low-cost non-cryogenic technology,
MCG is foreseen as a novel method to be used for both pre-interventional and intraoperative 3D EAI of arrhythmogenic substrates.
KW - magnetocardiographic mapping
KW - magnetocardiographic mapping
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/222788
U2 - 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx493.P5526
DO - 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx493.P5526
M3 - Conference article
SN - 0195-668X
VL - 38
SP - 1182
EP - 1182
JO - European Heart Journal
JF - European Heart Journal
T2 - European Congress of cardiology
Y2 - 26 August 2017 through 30 August 2017
ER -