Comparison of various late gadolinium enhancement magnetic resonance imaging methods with high-definition voltage and activation mapping for detection of atrial cardiomyopathy
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Atrial cardiomyopathy (ACM) is associated with increased arrhythmia recurrence rates after pulmonary vein isolation (PVI). We compare the most common left atrial (LA) late gadolinium enhancement magnetic resonance imaging (LGE-MRI)-methods [Utah-method and image intensity ratio (IIR)-methods] and endocardial voltage mapping for ACM-detection and outcome prediction after PVI for atrial fibrillation (AF).
In this prospective observational study, 37 ablation-naive patients (66 ± 9 years, 84% male) with persistent AF underwent LA-LGE-MRI and high-definition voltage and activation mapping (2129 ± 484 sites) in sinus rhythm prior to PVI. The MRI-post-processing-analyses were performed by two independent expert laboratories. Arrhythmia recurrence was recorded within 12 months following PVI. The global ACM-extent was highly variable: median LA low-voltage substrate (LA-LVS) was 12.9% at <1.0 mV and 2.7% at <0.5 mV; median LA-LGE-extent using the Utah-method was 18.3% and 0.03–93.1% using the IIR-methods. The LA activation time was significantly correlated with LA-LVS (
Comparison of the most common LA-LGE-MRI methods and endocardial voltage mapping revealed large discrepancies in global and regional ACM-extent.
Contributors

Martin Eichenlaub
Author

Bjoern Mueller-Edenborn
Author

Jan Minners
Author

Rosa M Figueras i Ventura
Author

Barbara Rubio Forcada
Author

Anna Vallès Colomer
Author

Manuel Hein
Author

Philipp Ruile
Author

Heiko Lehrmann
Author

Simon Schoechlin
Author

Juergen Allgeier
Author

Marius Bohnen
Author

Dietmar Trenk
Author

Franz Josef Neumann
Author

Thomas Arentz
Author

Amir Jadidi
Author
