The Assumptions of Isochronal Cardiac Mapping
- 1 March 1989
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology
- Vol. 12 (3) , 456-478
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-8159.1989.tb02684.x
Abstract
Isochronal maps of cardiac activation are commonly used to study the mechanisms and to guide the ablative therapies of arrhythmias. Little has been written about the assumptions implicit in the construction and use of isochronal cardiac maps. These assumptions include the following: (1) the location of the recording electrodes is known with sufficient accuracy to determine the mechanism of an arrhythmia or to guide therapy; (2) a single, discrete activation time can be assigned to each recording electrode location; (3) the presence or absence of activation at an electrode site can be reliably ascertained, and when activation is present, the time of activation can be determined with sufficient accuracy to specify the mechanism of an arrhythmia or to guide therapy; and (4) the recording electrodes are close enough together that the activation sequence can be estimated with sufficient accuracy to determine the mechanism of an arrhythmia or to guide therapy. The manuscript reviews evidence that these assumptions may not always be true, and when they are not, the isochronal map may be misleading.Keywords
This publication has 69 references indexed in Scilit:
- Correlation between refractory periods and activation-recovery intervals from electrograms: effects of rate and adrenergic interventions.Circulation, 1985
- Electrophysiologic and anatomic basis for fractionated electrograms recorded from healed myocardial infarcts.Circulation, 1985
- Reentrant ventricular arrhythmias in the late myocardial infarction period. Interruption of reentrant circuits by cryothermal techniques.Circulation, 1983
- The transition to ventricular fibrillation induced by reperfusion after acute ischemia in the dog: a period of organized epicardial activation.Circulation, 1981
- Epicardial mapping and electrocardiographic models of myocardial ischemic injury.Circulation, 1979
- Continuous local electrical activity. A mechanism of recurrent ventricular tachycardia.Circulation, 1978
- Re-entrant ventricular arrhythmias in the late myocardial infarction period. 1. Conduction characteristics in the infarction zone.Circulation, 1977
- Origin of body surface QRS and T wave potentials from epicardial potential distributions in the intact chimpanzee.Circulation, 1977
- Sampling rates required for digital recording of intracellular and extracellular cardiac potentials.Circulation, 1977
- Slow Ventricular Activation in Acute Myocardial InfarctionCirculation, 1973