Single catheter determination of local electrogram prematurity (UniOn-BiP) correlated closely with surface ECG timing (r=0.85) and was shorter at successful ablation sites (3.8 vs 9.2 ms, P<0.001).
Observational (n=40)
Does the comparison of simultaneous unipolar and bipolar electrograms from a single catheter accurately assess the prematurity of local electrograms compared to surface ECG timing?
Simultaneous unipolar and bipolar electrograms from a single catheter can accurately assess local electrogram prematurity without needing the surface ECG as a timing reference.
Absolute Event Rate: 3.8% vs 9.2%
p-value: p=<0.001
Bipolar recordings eliminate much of the far-field signal, while minimally filtered unipolar recordings contain substantial far-field signal components. These properties may allow the onset of the unipolar recording to serve as a timing reference for the bipolar recording obtained from the same electrode catheter during mapping of focal atrial or ventricular tachycardias. Mapping and RF ablation were performed in 26 patients with focal ventricular tachycardia and 14 patients with focal atrial tachycardia. At 205 mapping sites, simultaneous recordings of (1) minimally filtered unipolar electrograms (0.5-500 Hz), (2) high pass filtered unipolar electrograms (100 Hz), and (3) filtered bipolar recordings (30-500 Hz) were analyzed. The interval between the onset of the minimally filtered unipolar electrogram and the first peak of the bipolar electrogram (UniOn-BiP) correlated closely with the timing of the local electrogram referenced to the surface ECG (r = 0.85, P < 0.001). Of 53 sites where RF ablation was performed, UniOn-BiP was shorter at successful compared to unsuccessful sites (3.8 +/- 3.5 vs 9.2 +/- 5.2 ms, P < 0.001) and was < 15 ms at all successful sites. In conclusion, the comparison of simultaneous unipolar and bipolar electrograms from a single catheter allows assessment of the prematurity of local electrograms from a focal source without the use of the P wave or QRS onset as a timing reference.
Delacrétaz et al. (Sun,) conducted a observational in Focal ventricular tachycardia and focal atrial tachycardia (n=40). Single catheter determination of local electrogram prematurity (UniOn-BiP interval) vs. Surface ECG timing reference / Unsuccessful ablation sites was evaluated on UniOn-BiP interval at successful compared to unsuccessful radiofrequency ablation sites (p=<0.001). Single catheter determination of local electrogram prematurity (UniOn-BiP) correlated closely with surface ECG timing (r=0.85) and was shorter at successful ablation sites (3.8 vs 9.2 ms, P<0.001).
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