Using supplemental information to improve inverse problem solutions
US-2015164357-A1 · Jun 18, 2015 · US
US11039776B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11039776-B2 |
| Application number | US-201815934619-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Mar 23, 2018 |
| Priority date | Mar 23, 2018 |
| Publication date | Jun 22, 2021 |
| Grant date | Jun 22, 2021 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
This disclosure provides one or more computer-readable media having computer-executable instructions for performing a method. The method includes storing geometry data representing a primary geometry of a cardiac envelope that includes nodes distributed across the cardiac envelope and geometry of a body surface that includes locations where electrical signals are measured. The body surface is spaced apart from the cardiac envelope. The method also includes perturbing the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope a given distance and direction to define the perturbed geometry of the cardiac envelope including nodes spaced from the nodes of the primary geometry. The method also includes computing reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the nodes of the primary cardiac envelope based on the electrical signals measured from the body surface and the geometry data, including the primary and perturbed geometries of the cardiac envelope.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. One or more computer-readable media having computer-executable instructions for performing a method comprising: storing geometry data representing a primary geometry of a cardiac envelope that includes nodes distributed across the cardiac envelope and geometry of a body surface that includes locations where electrical signals are measured, the body surface being spaced apart from the cardiac envelope; perturbing the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope, including respective nodes thereof, a given distance and direction to define a perturbed geometry of the cardiac envelope including nodes spaced from the respective nodes of the primary geometry; and computing reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the nodes of the primary cardiac envelope based on the electrical signals measured from the body surface and the geometry data, the geometry data including the primary and perturbed geometries of the cardiac envelope. 2. The media of claim 1 , wherein the method further comprise storing electrical data representing the measured electrical signals on the body surface over at least one time interval, the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals being computed on the cardiac envelope for each of a plurality of time samples during the time interval. 3. The media of claim 2 , wherein the nodes of the cardiac envelope are perturbed for a set of perturbations at each of the plurality of time samples, each perturbation in the set of perturbations displacing the nodes of the cardiac envelope a known distance and direction from the respective nodes of the primary geometry, the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals are computed for each perturbation in the set of perturbations for each of the plurality of time samples. 4. The media of claim 3 , wherein computing reconstructed bipolar electrical signals includes calculating a difference between an electrical potential of a given node of the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope and an electrical potential of the given node at each perturbed node location of the cardiac envelope. 5. The media of claim 4 , wherein each of the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals for each of nodes on the cardiac envelope is computed as a bipolar vector having a magnitude and direction, the magnitude corresponding to the calculated difference and the direction corresponding to a direction along a virtual line extending from a node location of the primary geometry to the corresponding perturbed node location in the corresponding perturbed geometry. 6. The media of claim 5 , wherein the method further comprises: comparing the magnitude of the bipolar vectors computed for the set of perturbations at the given node and time sample to identify a strongest bipolar signal for the given node and time sample; and repeating the comparison for each of the time samples in the time interval to identify the strongest bipolar signal for each of the nodes in each of the time samples, the strongest bipolar signal for each of the nodes in each of the time samples being stored in memory as the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope for the time interval. 7. The media of claim 3 , wherein the set of perturbations are uniformly distributed in three-dimensional perturbation space such that each respective node of the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope resides near a center of the perturbation space for the respective node. 8. The media of claim 1 , wherein computing the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals further comprises: deriving a bipolar forward model expressing the electrical signals on the body surface as a function of a bipolar transformation matrix and the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope; and solving an inverse computation of the bipolar forward model to determine the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope based on the electrical signals measured from the body surface. 9. The media of claim 8 , wherein solving the inverse computation further comprises regularizing the bipolar transformation matrix to estimate an inverse of the bipolar transformation matrix, the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the cardiac envelope being determined based on the inverse of the bipolar transformation matrix and the electrical signals measured from the body surface. 10. The media of claim 8 , wherein the nodes of the cardiac envelope are perturbed for a set of perturbations at each of a plurality of time samples, each perturbation displacing the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope a respective distance and direction to define the perturbed geometry of the cardiac envelope, such that the nodes of the perturbed geometry are spaced from the nodes of the primary geometry, wherein the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals are computed for each perturbation in the set of perturbations for each of the plurality of time samples as a bipolar vector, having a magnitude and direction, based on a difference between an electrical potential of each respective node of the primary geometry and an electrical potential of its corresponding node of the perturbed geometry. 11. The media of claim 10 , wherein for each node of the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope, the method further comprising: comparing a magnitude of the bipolar vector computed for each respective node over the set of perturbations to identify a strongest bipolar signal for each respective node; and storing the strongest bipolar signal for each of the nodes as the reconstructed bipolar electrical signal for the respective node. 12. The media of claim 1 , wherein the method further comprises: generating a graphical map that displays at least one of the activation time and direction of activation corresponding to the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals computed over a time interval. 13. The media of claim 1 , wherein the measured electrical signals comprise unipolar electrograms measured non-invasively using a plurality of body surface electrodes distributed on a portion patient's torso. 14. One or more computer-readable media having computer-executable instructions for performing a method comprising: storing geometry data representing a primary geometry of a cardiac envelope that includes nodes distributed across the cardiac envelope and geometry of a body surface that includes locations where electrical signals are measured, the body surface being spaced apart from the cardiac envelope; perturbing the primary geometry of the cardiac envelope a given distance and direction to define a perturbed geometry of the cardiac envelope including nodes spaced from the nodes of the primary geometry; computing reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the nodes of the primary cardiac envelope based on the electrical signals measured from the body surface and the geometry data, including the primary and perturbed geometries of the cardiac envelope; comparing the magnitude of bipolar vectors computed for the set of perturbations at a given node of the primary geometry and a given time sample to identify a strongest bipolar signal for the given node and time sample; and repeating the comparison for each of a series of time samples in a time interval to identify respective strongest bipolar signals for each of the nodes of the primary geometry in each of the time samples in the time interval, the strongest bipolar signal for each of the nodes in each of the time samples being stored in memory as the reconstructed bipolar electrical signals on the primary geometry of the cardiac envelo
Electrophysiological study [EPS], e.g. electrical activation mapping or electro-anatomical mapping · CPC title
Holders for multiple electrodes (for introduction into the body A61B5/287) · CPC title
Heart stimulators (heart defibrillators A61N1/39) · CPC title
involving electronic [EMR] or nuclear [NMR] magnetic resonance, e.g. magnetic resonance imaging · CPC title
Holders for multiple electrodes, e.g. electrode catheters for electrophysiological study [EPS] · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.