Right ventricular endocardial unipolar voltage mapping significantly correlated with epicardial bipolar voltage (Spearman rho = 0.499, P < 0.001).
Observational
Does right ventricular endocardial unipolar voltage mapping correlate with epicardial bipolar voltage mapping using a multielectrode mapping catheter in patients undergoing ablation?
Endocardial unipolar voltage mapping using small multielectrode catheters can reliably assess epicardial low voltage in the right ventricle, with optimal thresholds identified for detecting low voltage and dense scar.
Effect estimate: Spearman rho = 0.499
p-value: p=< 0.001
AIMS: Prior studies identified a relationship between epicardial bipolar and endocardial unipolar voltage. Whether the relationship is valid with smaller multielectrode mapping catheters has not been reported. We explored the association of right ventricular (RV) endocardial unipolar voltage mapping with epicardial bipolar voltage mapping using a multielectrode mapping catheter. METHODS: Electrograms from patients who underwent multielectrode endocardial and epicardial RV electroanatomical mapping during ablation procedures were analyzed. Each endocardial mapping point was matched to the corresponding nearest epicardial point. The correlation between unipolar endocardial voltage and epicardial bipolar voltage was determined. The optimal unipolar threshold to detect epicardial low voltage (< 1.0 mV) and dense scar (0.5 mV) was calculated. RESULTS: A total of 4,895 points were analyzed. There was a significant correlation between endocardial unipolar and epicardial bipolar voltage (Spearman rho = 0.499, P = < 0.001). The extent of the correlation was inversely associated with wall thickness. The receiver operator characteristic analysis of endocardial unipolar voltage predicting epicardial bipolar voltage of < 1.0 mV and < 0.5 showed an area under the curve of 0.769 and 0.812, respectively. The endocardial unipolar voltage that had the highest sensitivity and specificity in detecting epicardial bipolar voltage of < 1.0 mV and < 0.5 mV was 3.3 mV (70.3% sensitivity, 70.3% specificity), and 2.8 mV (sensitivity 73.8%, specificity 73.3%), respectively. CONCLUSION: Epicardial low voltage of the RV can be assessed by unipolar endocardial voltage using small multielectrode catheters. The strength of the association was inversely correlated with the wall thickness.
Chrispin et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Patients undergoing ablation procedures. Right ventricular endocardial unipolar voltage mapping vs. Epicardial bipolar voltage mapping was evaluated on Correlation between unipolar endocardial voltage and epicardial bipolar voltage (Spearman rho = 0.499, p=< 0.001). Right ventricular endocardial unipolar voltage mapping significantly correlated with epicardial bipolar voltage (Spearman rho = 0.499, P < 0.001).
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