The Effect of Electrode Configuration on the Unipolar His-Bundle Electrogram |
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Authors: | ALAN H. KADISH FRED MORADY SHIMON ROSENHECK JONI SUMMITT STEVE SCHMALTZ |
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Affiliation: | Division of Cardiology, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor. |
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Abstract: | Although "unipolar electrograms" recorded from the His-bundle position have been used to help position catheters for His-bundle ablation, the techniques used to record such electrograms have not been standardized. The effects of five anode locations (right chest wall, anterior chest wall, left chest wall, posterior chest wall, and inferior vena cava) on unipolar atrial, His bundle and ventricular electrograms recorded from the His-bundle position were examined in ten patients undergoing clinical electrophysiology studies. Electrograms were recorded at filter settings of 50-500 as well as 0.05-1000 Hz. The location of the anode had no consistent effect on the amplitude, duration or morphology of any of the electrograms at either filter setting, but signals recorded with the inferior vena cava anode had the highest signal-to-noise ratio. A filter setting of 50-500 Hz decreased the amplitude of atrial (0.72 to 0.33 mV-P less than 0.01), His bundle (0.38 vs 0.32 mV-P less than 0.01) and ventricular electrograms (3.71 vs 2.01 mV-P less than 0.001) compared to a filter setting of 0.05-1,000 Hz. The filter setting did not affect electrogram duration. We concluded that the use of an electrode catheter in the inferior vena cava as the anode when recording "unipolar electrograms" from the His-bundle position yields a better signal-to-noise ratio than a skin patch on the chest and appears to be the optimal method for recording unipolar electrograms. |
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Keywords: | His bundle unipolar filtering electrograms |
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