2019
DOI: 10.21037/cdt.2019.10.02
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Advanced mapping strategies for ablation therapy in adults with congenital heart disease

Abstract: Background: Ultra-high density mapping (HDM) is a promising tool in the treatment of patients with complex arrhythmias. In adults with congenital heart disease (CHD), rhythm disorders are among the most common complications but catheter ablation can be challenging due to heterogenous anatomy and complex arrhythmogenic substrates. Here, we describe our initial experience using HDM in conjunction with novel automated annotation algorithms in patients with moderate to great CHD complexity.Methods: We studied a se… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…For this, an expandable 64-polar mini basket catheter (Orion, Boston Scientific) comprising of eight splines with eight electrodes (electrode spacing 2.5 mm, electrode surface area 0.4 mm 2 ) was maneuvered into the left ventricle via an atrial transseptal puncture, using a fixed curve long sheath (SL0, 8-F; St. Jude Medical, USA; for the ablation catheter) and a long steerable sheath (Agilis large curl, 8.5-F, St. Jude Medical, for the mini basket catheter) [2]. Electrogram annotation was conducted automatically by the mapping system using the following criteria for beat acceptance: (1) cycle length stability: ±10 ms; (2) stability of relative timing of reference electrograms: ±5 ms; (3) respiration gating: automatic measurement and filtering of motion above maximum inspiration movement by change of impedance of the ECG-electrodes; (4) electrode location stability: 2-3 mm [12]. The maximum projection distance of the electrode to the captured anatomic geometry was set to 3 mm [13].…”
Section: Electrophysiological Study and Ablationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For this, an expandable 64-polar mini basket catheter (Orion, Boston Scientific) comprising of eight splines with eight electrodes (electrode spacing 2.5 mm, electrode surface area 0.4 mm 2 ) was maneuvered into the left ventricle via an atrial transseptal puncture, using a fixed curve long sheath (SL0, 8-F; St. Jude Medical, USA; for the ablation catheter) and a long steerable sheath (Agilis large curl, 8.5-F, St. Jude Medical, for the mini basket catheter) [2]. Electrogram annotation was conducted automatically by the mapping system using the following criteria for beat acceptance: (1) cycle length stability: ±10 ms; (2) stability of relative timing of reference electrograms: ±5 ms; (3) respiration gating: automatic measurement and filtering of motion above maximum inspiration movement by change of impedance of the ECG-electrodes; (4) electrode location stability: 2-3 mm [12]. The maximum projection distance of the electrode to the captured anatomic geometry was set to 3 mm [13].…”
Section: Electrophysiological Study and Ablationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…New substrates for recurrences were identified in repeat procedures to be mechanistically distinct, which have been reported in other CHD cohorts. 9,16,22 This finding would suggest that the index arrhythmia substrates were appropriately targeted in our cohort and that potentially they were the result of progressive atrial myopathy rather than inadequate ablation strategy or lesion formation.…”
Section: Follow-upmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…2 Several reports have been published on its usefulness for identifying the critical isthmus and abnormal diastolic potentials of ventricular tachycardia, atrial tachycardia, and APs, [3][4][5] and its safety and efficacy are proven in patients with congenital heart disease. 6 Rhythmia is also a very useful tool for finding the optimal ablation point for an AP by using dual-chamber mapping. 7 However, Lumipoint operates with a different algorithm than the conventional activation mapping algorithm.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%