DocumentCode :
879744
Title :
Effect of Cardiac Motion on Solution of the Electrocardiography Inverse Problem
Author :
Jiang, Mingfeng ; Xia, Ling ; Shou, Guofa ; Wei, Qing ; Liu, Feng ; Crozier, Stuart
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Zhejiang Univ., Hangzhou
Volume :
56
Issue :
4
fYear :
2009
fDate :
4/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
923
Lastpage :
931
Abstract :
Previous studies of the ECG inverse problem often assumed that the heart was static during the cardiac cycle; consequently, a time-dependent geometrical error was thought to be unavoidably introduced. In this paper, cardiac motion is included in solutions to the electrocardiographic inverse problem. Cardiac dynamics are simulated based on a previously developed biventricular model that coupled the electrical and mechanical properties of the heart, and simulated the ventricular wall motion and deformation. In the forward computation, the heart surface source model method is employed to calculate the epicardial potentials from the action potentials, and then, the simulated epicardial potentials are used to calculate body surface potentials. With the inclusion of cardiac motion, the calculated body surface potentials are more reasonable than those in the case of static assumption. In the epicardial potential-based inverse studies, the Tikhonov regularization method is used to handle ill-posedness of the ECG inverse problem. The simulation results demonstrate that the solutions obtained from both the static ECG inverse problem and the dynamic ECG inverse problem approaches are approximately the same during the QRS complex period, due to the minimal deformation of the heart in this period. However, with the most obvious deformation occurring during the ST-T segment, the static assumption of heart always generates something akin to geometry noise in the ECG inverse problem causing the inverse solutions to have large errors. This study suggests that the inclusion of cardiac motion in solving the ECG inverse problem can lead to more accurate and acceptable inverse solutions.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; biomechanics; electrocardiography; medical signal processing; ST-T segment; Tikhonov regularization method; action potentials; biventricular model; body surface potentials; cardiac dynamics; cardiac motion; deformation; electrical property; electrocardiography inverse problem; epicardial potentials; geometry noise; heart; heart surface source model method; mechanical property; ventricular wall motion; Biomedical engineering; Computational modeling; Conductors; Deformable models; Electrocardiography; Geometry; Heart; Inverse problems; Research and development; Torso; Cardiac motion; ECG inverse problem; heart surface source method; static heart model; Body Surface Potential Mapping; Humans; Models, Cardiovascular; Motion; Movement; Myocardial Contraction;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2008.2005967
Filename :
4637840
Link To Document :
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