4.7 Article

Electroanatomical mapping of the stomach with simultaneous biomagnetic measurements

Journal

COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 165, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.107384

Keywords

Magnetogastrography; Slow waves; Biomagnetism; Electroanatomical mapping

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This article introduces a novel method for measuring gastric motility using bioelectric slow waves and biomagnetic slow waves. The feasibility of the method was verified by conducting experiments on two anesthetized pigs, which showed that the method enables quantitative spatial co-registration of gastric activity and analysis based on anatomical structures.
Gastric motility is coordinated by bioelectric slow waves (SWs) and dysrhythmic SW activity has been linked with motility disorders. Magnetogastrography (MGG) is the non-invasive measurement of the biomagnetic fields generated by SWs. Dysrhythmia identification using MGG is currently challenging because source models are not well developed and the impact of anatomical variation is not well understood. A novel method for the quantitative spatial co-registration of serosal SW potentials, MGG, and geometric models of anatomical structures was developed and performed on two anesthetized pigs to verify feasibility. Electrode arrays were localized using electromagnetic transmitting coils. Coil localization error for the volume where the stomach is normally located under the sensor array was assessed in a benchtop experiment, and mean error was 4.2 & PLUSMN; 2.3 mm and 3.6 & PLUSMN; 3.3 degrees for a coil orientation parallel to the sensor array and 6.2 & PLUSMN; 5.7 mm and 4.5 & PLUSMN; 7.0 degrees for a perpendicular coil orientation. Stomach geometries were reconstructed by fitting a generic stomach to up to 19 localization coils, and SW activation maps were mapped onto the reconstructed geometries using the registered positions of 128 electrodes. Normal proximal-to-distal and ectopic SW propagation patterns were recorded from the serosa and compared against the simultaneous MGG measurements. Correlations between the center-of-gravity of normalized MGG and the mean position of SW activity on the serosa were 0.36 and 0.85 for the ectopic and normal propagation patterns along the proximal-distal stomach axis, respectively. This study presents the first feasible method for the spatial co-registration of MGG, serosal SW measurements, and subject-specific anatomy. This is a significant advancement because these data enable the development and validation of novel non-invasive gastric source characterization methods.

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