Title :
Pressure–Frequency Sensing Subxiphoid Access System for Use in Percutaneous Cardiac Electrophysiology: Prototype Design and Pilot Study Results
Author :
Tucker-Schwartz, Jason M. ; Gillies, George T. ; Scanavacca, Mauricio ; Sosa, Eduardo ; Mahapatra, Srijoy
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA
fDate :
4/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We have designed, built, and tested an early prototype of a novel subxiphoid access system intended to facilitate epicardial electrophysiology, but with possible applications elsewhere in the body. The present version of the system consists of a commercially available insertion needle, a miniature pressure sensor and interconnect tubing, read-out electronics to monitor the pressures measured during the access procedure, and a host computer with user-interface software. The nominal resolution of the system is <0.1 mmHg, and it has deviations from linearity of <1%. During a pilot series of human clinical studies with this system, as well as in an auxiliary study done with an independent method, we observed that the pericardial space contained pressure-frequency components related to both the heart rate and respiratory rate, while the thorax contained components related only to the respiratory rate, a previously unobserved finding that could facilitate access to the pericardial space. We present and discuss the design principles, details of construction, and performance characteristics of this system.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biomedical electronics; cardiology; pressure sensors; user interfaces; epicardial electrophysiology; heart rate; interconnect tubing; miniature pressure sensor; percutaneous cardiac electrophysiology; pressure-frequency sensing subxiphoid access system; prototype design; read-out electronics; respiratory rate; thorax; user-interface software; Application software; Computerized monitoring; Humans; Linearity; Needles; Pressure measurement; Prototypes; Sensor systems; Software measurement; System testing; Epicardial ablation; epicardial access; pericardium; physiological measurements; thoracic pressure; Ablation Techniques; Calibration; Cardiac Electrophysiology; Equipment Design; Humans; Middle Aged; Needles; Pericardium; Pilot Projects; Pressure; Transducers;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2008.2009527