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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Influencia del tipo de registro (unipolar o bipolar) en las características espectrales de los registros epicárdicos de la fibrilación ventricular. Estudio experimental

Antonio AlberolaJoaquín CánovesFrancisco J. ChorroLuis MainarFrancisca PelechanoVicente BodiLuis Such-miquelIsabel TraperoÁNgel FerreroJuan SanchisJuan GuerreroArcadio García-alberolaLuis Such

subject

business.industryDominant frequencymedicine.diseaseMean frequencyFree wallNuclear magnetic resonancemental disordersVentricular fibrillationcardiovascular systemmedicineCoherence (signal processing)Spectral analysisCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinebusiness

description

Introduction and objectives. The aim of this study was to examine the hypothesis that the recording mode (ie, unipolar or bipolar) affects the information obtained using spectral analysis techniques during ventricular fibrillation by carrying out an experiment using epicardial electrodes. Methods. Recordings of ventricular fibrillation were obtained in 29 isolated rabbit hearts using a multipleelectrode probe located on the left ventricular free wall. The parameter values obtained in the frequency domain (by Fourier analysis) using unipolar or bipolar electrodes, different interelectrode distances, and different orientations (ie, horizontal, vertical, or diagonal) were compared. Results. Changing the recording mode (ie, unipolar to bipolar) or the interelectrode distance significantly altered the mean frequency (P<.0001) and the normalized energy of the spectrum (±1 Hz) around the dominant frequency (P<.05), though the changes were small relative to the dominant frequency. Cross-spectral analysis showed that the coherence between unipolar recordings decreased as the interelectrode distance increased, while the opposite occurred with the coherence between unipolar and bipolar recordings. The 2 coherences were inversely correlated such that the greater the former coherence, the less the coherence between unipolar and bipolar recordings (r=0.29; P<.0001; n=348). Conclusions. The recording mode (ie, unipolar or bipolar) used influenced the information obtained using spectral analysis techniques from epicardial recordings of

https://doi.org/10.1157/13111238