An assessment of variable thickness and fiber orientation of the skeletal muscle layer on electrocardiographic calculations
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
- Vol. 38 (11), 1069-1076
- https://doi.org/10.1109/10.99070
Abstract
This paper assesses the effectiveness of including variable thickness and fiber orientation characteristics of the skeletal muscle layer in calculations relating epicardial and torso potentials. A realistic model of a canine torso which includes extensive detail about skeletal muscle layer thickness and fiber orientation is compared with two other uniformly anisotropic models: one of constant thickness and the other of variable thickness. First, transfer coefficients are calculated from the model data. Then torso potentials for each model are calculated from the transfer coefficients and measured epicardial potentials. The comparison of calculated and observed torso potentials indicates that a simple model consisting of a uniformly anisotropic skeletal muscle layer of 1.0-1.5 cm constant thickness significantly improves the model. However, if photographic slices of the canine torso are used to introduce more detailed data about the variation in skeletal muscle thickness and fiber orientation into the model, the agreement and between calculated and measured torso potentials decreased, although a finite element mesh of over 5000 nodes was used to describe the skeletal muscle in the more detailed model. One source of error increase was considered to be due to numerical discretization and could be reduced with a much finer mesh or by utilizing higher order polynomials to represent the potential distribution within each finite element. However, the results presented in this paper show that high precision computation (64-bit word length) on the mainframe IBM 3081 with an attached FPS-164 gives a slow rate of improvement with reduced discretization intervals and that utilizing higher order polynomials within each finite element gives an even slower rate of improvement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The combination method: a numerical technique for electrocardiographic calculationsIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1989
- A Comparison of Finite Element and Integral Equation Formulations for the Calculation of Electrocardiographic Potentials-IIIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1987
- The Effects of Thoracic Inhomogeneities on the Relationship Between Epicardial and Torso PotentialsIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1986
- A Comparison of Finite Element and Integral Equation Formulations for the Calculation of Electrocardiographic PotentialsIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1985
- A simulation study of the effects of torso inhomogeneities on electrocardiographic potentials, using realistic heart and torso models.Circulation Research, 1983
- A comparison of volume conductor and source geometry effects on body surface and epicardial potentials.Circulation Research, 1980
- An Approach to Inverse Calculation of Epicardial Potentials from Body Surface Maps1Published by S. Karger AG ,1977
- Relating Epicardial to Body Surface Potential Distributions by Means of Transfer Coefficients Based on Geometry MeasurementsIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1977
- The utilization of integral equations for solving three-dimensional, time-invariant, conservative fieldsInternational Journal of Engineering Science, 1969
- A Mathematical-Physical Model of the Genesis of the ElectrocardiogramBiophysical Journal, 1964