Non-invasive body surface electrocardiographic imaging for diagnosis of atrial cardiomyopathy
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Atrial cardiomyopathy (ACM) is associated with new-onset atrial fibrillation, arrhythmia recurrence after pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) and increased risk for stroke. At present, diagnosis of ACM is feasible by endocardial contact mapping of left atrial (LA) low-voltage substrate (LVS) or late gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, but their complexity limits a widespread use. The aim of this study was to assess non-invasive body surface electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI) as a novel clinical tool for diagnosis of ACM compared with endocardial mapping.
Thirty-nine consecutive patients (66 ± 9 years, 85% male) presenting for their first PVI for persistent atrial fibrillation underwent ECGI in sinus rhythm using a 252-electrode-array mapping system. Subsequently, high-density LA voltage and biatrial activation maps (mean 2090 ± 488 sites) were acquired in sinus rhythm prior to PVI. Freedom from arrhythmia recurrence was assessed within 12 months follow-up. Increased duration of total atrial conduction time (TACT) in ECGI was associated with both increased atrial activation time and extent of LA-LVS in endocardial contact mapping (
Analysis of TACT in non-invasive ECGI allows diagnosis of patients with ACM, which is associated with a significantly increased risk for arrhythmia recurrence following PVI.
Contributors

Martin Eichenlaub
Author

Bjoern Mueller-Edenborn
Author

Heiko Lehrmann
Author

Jan Minners
Author

Deborah Nairn
Author

Axel Loewe
Author

Juergen Allgeier
Author

Nikolaus Jander
Author

Martin Allgeier
Author

Philipp Ruile
Author

Manuel Hein
Author

Felix Rees
Author

Dietmar Trenk
Author

Reinhold Weber
Author

Franz-Josef Neumann
Author

Thomas Arentz
Author

Amir Jadidi
Author
