Current practices in studying cardiac arrhythmias primarily use electrical or optical surface recordings of a heart, spatially limited transmural recordings, and mathematical models. However, given that such arrhythmias occur on a 3D myocardial tissue, information obtained from such practices lack in dimension, completeness, and are sometimes prone to oversimplification. The combination of complementary Magnetic-Resonance Imaging (MRI)-based techniques such as Current Density Imaging (CDI) and Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) could provide more depth to current practices in assessing the cardiac arrhythmia dynamics in entire cross sections of myocardium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrent density imaging (CDI) is a magnetic resonance (MR) imaging technique that could be used to study current pathways inside the tissue. The current distribution is measured indirectly as phase changes. The inherent noise in the MR imaging technique degrades the accuracy of phase measurements leading to imprecise current variations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Effective chest compressions during prolonged ventricular fibrillation (VF) have been shown to increase the chances of successful defibrillation to a rhythm associated with a sustainable cardiac output. There is currently no effective method of recording the degree of antegrade coronary artery flow during chest compression in VF.
Objective: This study sought to quantify the relationship between the antegrade coronary flow and the characteristics of human VF using near real-time wavelet-based electrocardiographic markers.