Author/Authors :
Pollnow, Stefan Institute of Biomedical Engineering - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) - Karlsruhe, Germany , Greiner, Joachim Institute of Biomedical Engineering - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) - Karlsruhe, Germany , Oesterlein, Tobias Institute of Biomedical Engineering - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) - Karlsruhe, Germany , Wülfers, Eike M University Heart Center Freiburg - Bad Krozingen and Medical Faculty - University of Freiburg - Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany , Loewe, Axel Institute of Biomedical Engineering - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) - Karlsruhe, Germany , Dössel, Olaf Institute of Biomedical Engineering - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) - Karlsruhe, Germany
Abstract :
Radiofrequency ablation has become a first-line approach for curative therapy of many cardiac arrhythmias. Various existing
catheter designs provide high spatial resolution to identify the best spot for performing ablation and to assess lesion formation.
However, creation of transmural and nonconducting ablation lesions requires usage of catheters with larger electrodes and improved
thermal conductivity, leading to reduced spatial sensitivity. As trade-off, an ablation catheter with integrated mini electrodes
was introduced. The additional diagnostic benefit of this catheter is still not clear. In order to solve this issue, we implemented
a computational setup with different ablation scenarios. Our in silico results show that peak-to-peak amplitudes of unipolar
electrograms from mini electrodes are more suitable to differentiate ablated and nonablated tissue compared to electrograms from
the distal ablation electrode. However, in orthogonal mapping position, no significant difference was observed between distal
electrode and mini electrodes electrograms in the ablation scenarios. In conclusion, catheters with mini electrodes bring about
additional benefit to distinguish ablated tissue from nonablated tissue in parallel position with high spatial resolution. It is feasible
to detect conduction gaps in linear lesions with this catheter by evaluating electrogram data from mini electrodes.