Frontiers in Physiology (Jul 2014)

How to measure propagation velocity in cardiac tissue: a simulation study

  • Andre C. Linnenbank,
  • Andre C. Linnenbank,
  • Jacques MT De Bakker,
  • Jacques MT De Bakker,
  • Jacques MT De Bakker,
  • Ruben eCoronel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2014.00267
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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To estimate conduction velocities from activation times in myocardial tissue, the average vector method computes all the local activation directions and velocities from local activation times and estimates the fastest and slowest propagation speed from these local values. The single vector method uses areas of apparent uniform elliptical spread of activation and chooses a single vector for the estimated longitudinal velocity and one for the transversal. A simulation study was performed to estimate the influence of grid size, anisotropy, and vector angle bin size. The results indicate that the average vector method can best be used if the grid- or bin-size is large, although systematic errors occur. The single vector method performs better, but requires human intervention for the definition of fiber direction. The average vector method can be automated.

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