P436The impact of filter settings on morphology of unipolar fibrillation potentials

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements N.M.S. de Groot, MD, PhD was supported by CVON-AFFIP (914728), NWO-Vidi (91717339) and Biosense Webster USA (ICD 783454). Background Using unipolar atrial electrogram morphology as guidance for ablative therapy is regaining interest. Although standardly used in clin...

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Published inEuropace (London, England) Vol. 22; no. Supplement_1
Main Authors Starreveld, R, Knops, P, Roos-Serote, M, Kik, C, Bogers, A J J C, Brundel, B J J M, De Groot, N M S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.06.2020
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Summary:Abstract Funding Acknowledgements N.M.S. de Groot, MD, PhD was supported by CVON-AFFIP (914728), NWO-Vidi (91717339) and Biosense Webster USA (ICD 783454). Background Using unipolar atrial electrogram morphology as guidance for ablative therapy is regaining interest. Although standardly used in clinical practice during ablative therapy, the impact of filter settings on morphology of unipolar AF potentials is unknown. Purpose This study aims to elucidate consequences of high-pass, low-pass and notch filtering on unipolar atrial fibrillation (AF) potentials. Methods Thirty different filter settings were applied to high-resolution epicardial AF potentials recorded from ten patients. . Local activation times were determined by marking deflections with slope ≤-0.05mV/ms and amplitude ≥0.3mV. Fibrillation potentials were analyzed for peak-to-peak amplitude (mV), number of deflections (f) and fractionation delay time (FDT, interval between first and last deflection), and classified as single potential (SP, f = 1), double potential (DP, f = 2) or complex fractionated potential (CP, f ≥ 3). Results In total, 3000 seconds of AF recordings were analyzed, containing 255,7045 fibrillation potentials. Changing high-pass filtering from 0.5 up to 100 Hz decreased the number of detected fibrillation potentials (with 25-65%), median deflection amplitude (min-max 0.59-0.96 to 0.44-0.57 mV), percentage of DP (25.8-32.9 to 22.5-31.6%) and CP (15.9-36.0 to 7.3-37.8%) as well as median FDT (16-25 to 11-15 ms) (all p < 0.01). Gradually changing low-pass filtering from 400 Hz to 20 Hz induced an exponential decrease in fibrillation potentials (to 0%), percentage of DP (25.8-32.9 to 0%) and CP (15.9-36.0 to 0%), whereas deflection amplitude, percentage of SP and median FDT exponentially increased (0.59-0.96 to 1.82-2.39 mV, 36.1-57.6 to 100%, 16-25 to 33-38 ms, respectively) (all p < 0.01). Notch filtering at 50 Hz decreased the number of detected fibrillation potentials (with ∼1%), median deflection amplitude (0.59-0.96 to 0.59-0.95 mV) (both p < 0.01), whereas the percentage of CP increased (15.9-36.0 to 16.2-37.0%, p = 0.016). Conclusions Filtering significantly impacted  of unipolar fibrillation potentials and decreased the number of detected potentials, becoming a potential source of error in identification of LATs, low-voltage areas, fractionated potentials and thus ablative targets during mapping. Potentials (%) Amplitude (mV) SP (%) DP (%) CFP (%) FDT (ms) Default (0.5-400 Hz) 100 0.59-0.96 36.1-57.6 25.8-32.9 15.9-36.0 16.0-25.0 High-pass filtering Decreased Decreased Increased Decreased Decreased Decreased Low-pass filtering Decreased Increased Increased Decreased Decreased Increased Notch filtering Decreased Decreased p = NS p = NS Increased p = NS Impact of filtering on morphology parameters Abstract Figure. Impact of filtering on AF morphology
ISSN:1099-5129
1532-2092
DOI:10.1093/europace/euaa162.279