Title :
MRI based injury characterization immediately following ablation of atrial fibrillation
Author :
Blauer, J.J.E. ; Cates, J. ; McGann, C.J. ; Kholmovski, E.G. ; Alexander, A. ; Prastawa, M.W. ; Joshi, S. ; Marrouche, N.F. ; MacLeod, R.S.
Author_Institution :
CARMA Center, Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Abstract :
A major limitation of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation is the lack of tools to evaluate the efficacy and extent of lesion creation. Late gadolinium enhanced MRI has been used to detect acute injury following ablation, and scar tissue that forms weeks to months later However, at the earliest imaging time point previously feasible in a clinical setting (<; 24 hrs. post-ablation) the tissue hyper-enhancement was diffuse and poorly predictive of future scarring. Using a new EP/MRI facility, and images acquired approximately 1 hr. post-ablation, heterogeneous atrial wall enhancement was observed. Specifically, regions of hypo-, normal, and hyper-enhancement were detected. Quantitative comparison of hyper-enhancing scar at 3 months post-ablation to enhancement states imaged acutely indicated a significant majority of scar comes from hypo-enhancing tissue. Further study of hypo-enhancing tissue may facilitate early examination of procedural end-points and prediction of scar formation.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; blood vessels; catheters; image enhancement; injuries; medical image processing; atrial fibrillation; catheter ablation; gadolinium enhanced MRI; heterogeneous atrial wall enhancement; injury characterization; lesion; scar tissue; time 3 month; tissue hyper-enhancement; tissue hypo-enhancement; Data models; Deformable models; Heart; Lesions; Magnetic resonance imaging; Rhythm; Solid modeling;
Conference_Titel :
Computing in Cardiology, 2010
Conference_Location :
Belfast
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7318-2