In silico validation of electrocardiographic imaging to reconstruct the endocardial and epicardial repolarization pattern using the equivalent dipole layer source model

Jeanne van der Waal, Veronique Meijborg, Steffen Schuler, Ruben Coronel, Thom Oostendorp

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The solution of the inverse problem of electrocardiology allows the reconstruction of the spatial distribution of the electrical activity of the heart from the body surface electrocardiogram (electrocardiographic imaging, ECGI). ECGI using the equivalent dipole layer (EDL) model has shown to be accurate for cardiac activation times. However, validation of this method to determine repolarization times is lacking. In the present study, we determined the accuracy of the EDL model in reconstructing cardiac repolarization times, and assessed the robustness of the method under less ideal conditions (addition of noise and errors in tissue conductivity). A monodomain model was used to determine the transmembrane potentials in three different excitation-repolarization patterns (sinus beat and ventricular ectopic beats) as the gold standard. These were used to calculate the body surface ECGs using a finite element model. The resulting body surface electrograms (ECGs) were used as input for the EDL-based inverse reconstruction of repolarization times. The reconstructed repolarization times correlated well (COR > 0.85) with the gold standard, with almost no decrease in correlation after adding errors in tissue conductivity of the model or noise to the body surface ECG. Therefore, ECGI using the EDL model allows adequate reconstruction of cardiac repolarization times. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1739-1749
Number of pages11
JournalMedical & Biological Engineering & Computing
Volume58
Issue number8
Early online date2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2020

Keywords

  • Cardiac arrhythmias
  • Electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI)
  • Equivalent dipole layer
  • Inverse problem of ECG
  • Repolarization

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