AI Article Synopsis

  • * Electromechanical Wave Imaging (EWI) can visualize how the heart's activation changes with different pacing strategies, and this study introduces a new metric to assess these changes.
  • * The study found that His-Bundle pacing showed the best efficiency for ventricular activation, and the new EWI dispersion metric effectively differentiated it from BiV and RV pacing in a small group of patients.

Article Abstract

Conventional biventricular (BiV) pacing cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) is an established treatment for heart failure patients. Recently, multiple novel CRT delivering technologies such as His-Bundle pacing have been investigated as alternative pacing strategies for optimal treatment benefit. Electromechanical Wave Imaging (EWI), a high frame-rate echocardiography-based modality, is capable of visualizing the change from dyssynchronous activation to resynchronized BiV-paced ventricles in 3D. This proof-of-concept study introduces a new EWI-based dispersion metric to further characterize ventricular activation. Patients with His-Bundle device implantation (n = 4), left-bundle branch block (n = 10), right-ventricular (RV) pacing (n = 10), or BiV pacing (n = 15) were imaged, as well as four volunteers in normal sinus rhythm (NSR). EWI successfully mapped the ventricular activation resulting from His-Bundle pacing. Additionally, very similar activation patterns were obtained in the NSR subjects, confirming recovery of physiological activation with His pacing. The dispersion metric was the most sensitive EWI-based metric that identified His pacing as the most efficient treatment (lowest activation time spread), followed by BiV and RV pacing. More specifically, the dispersion metric significantly (p < 0.005) distinguished His pacing from the other two pacing schemes as well as LBBB. The initial findings presented herein indicate that EWI and its new dispersion metric may provide a useful resynchronization evaluation clinical tool in CRT patients under both novel His-Bundle pacing and more conventional BiV pacing strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9975111PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TBME.2022.3203653DOI Listing

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