Time resolution for wavefront and phase singularity tracking using activation maps in cardiac propagation models

Fiche du document

Date

3 avril 2024

Type de document
Périmètre
Langue
Identifiants


Sujets proches En

Hours (Time)

Citer ce document

Samuel Gagné et al., « Time resolution for wavefront and phase singularity tracking using activation maps in cardiac propagation models », Papyrus : le dépôt institutionnel de l'Université de Montréal, ID : 10.1063/1.5133077


Métriques


Partage / Export

Résumé 0

The dynamics of cardiac fibrillation can be described by the number, the trajectory, the stability, and the lifespan of phase singularities (PSs). Accurate PS tracking is straightforward in simple uniform tissues but becomes more challenging as fibrosis, structural heterogeneity, and strong anisotropy are combined. In this paper, we derive a mathematical formulation for PS tracking in two-dimensional reaction–diffusion models. The method simultaneously tracks wavefronts and PS based on activation maps at full spatiotemporal resolution. PS tracking is formulated as a linear assignment problem solved by the Hungarian algorithm. The cost matrix incorporates information about distances between PS, chirality, and wavefronts. A graph of PS trajectories is generated to represent the creations and annihilations of PS pairs. Structure-preserving graph transformations are applied to provide a simplified description at longer observation time scales. The approach is validated in 180 simulations of fibrillation in four different types of substrates featuring, respectively, wavebreaks, ionic heterogeneities, fibrosis, and breakthrough patterns. The time step of PS tracking is studied in the range from 0.1 to 10 ms. The results show the benefits of improving time resolution from 1 to 0.1 ms. The tracking error rate decreases by an order of magnitude because the occurrence of simultaneous events becomes less likely. As observed on PS survival curves, the graph-based analysis facilitates the identification of macroscopically stable rotors despite wavefront fragmentation by fibrosis.

document thumbnail

Par les mêmes auteurs

Sur les mêmes sujets

Exporter en