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Dive into the research topics where Alok Gambhir is active.

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Featured researches published by Alok Gambhir.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2011

Electromechanical wave imaging for arrhythmias

Jean Provost; Vu Thanh-Hieu Nguyen; Diégo Legrand; Stan Okrasinski; Alexandre Costet; Alok Gambhir; Hasan Garan; Elisa E. Konofagou

Electromechanical wave imaging (EWI) is a novel ultrasound-based imaging modality for mapping of the electromechanical wave (EW), i.e. the transient deformations occurring in immediate response to the electrical activation. The correlation between the EW and the electrical activation has been established in prior studies. However, the methods used previously to map the EW required the reconstruction of images over multiple cardiac cycles, precluding the application of EWI for non-periodic arrhythmias such as fibrillation. In this study, new imaging sequences are developed and applied based on flash- and wide-beam emissions to image the entire heart at very high frame rates (2000 fps) during free breathing in a single heartbeat. The methods are first validated by imaging the heart of an open-chest canine while simultaneously mapping the electrical activation using a 64-electrode basket catheter. Feasibility is then assessed by imaging the atria and ventricles of closed-chest, conscious canines during sinus rhythm and during right-ventricular pacing following atrio-ventricular dissociation, i.e., during a non-periodic rhythm. The EW was validated against electrode measurements in the open-chest case, and followed the expected electrical propagation pattern in the closed-chest setting. These results indicate that EWI can be used for the characterization of non-periodic arrhythmias in conditions similar to the clinical setting, in a single heartbeat, and during free breathing.


Heart Rhythm | 2013

A clinical feasibility study of atrial and ventricular electromechanical wave imaging

Jean Provost; Alok Gambhir; John A. Vest; Hasan Garan; Elisa E. Konofagou

BACKGROUND Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) and atrial ablation procedures currently lack a noninvasive imaging modality for reliable treatment planning and monitoring. Electromechanical wave imaging (EWI) is an ultrasound-based method that has previously been shown to be capable of noninvasively and transmurally mapping the activation sequence of the heart in animal studies by estimating and imaging the electromechanical wave, that is, the transient strains occurring in response to the electrical activation, at both high temporal and spatial resolutions. OBJECTIVE To demonstrate the feasibility of transthoracic EWI for mapping the activation sequence during different cardiac rhythms in humans. METHODS EWI was perfor`med in patients undergoing CRT and a left bundle branch block (LBBB) during sinus rhythm, left ventricular pacing, and right ventricular pacing, as well as in patients with atrial flutter (AFL) before intervention, EWI findings from patients with AFL were subsequently correlated with results from invasive intracardiac electrical mapping studies during intervention. In addition, the feasibility of single-heartbeat EWI at 2000 frames/s is demonstrated in humans for the first time in a patient with both AFL and right bundle branch block (RBBB). RESULTS The electromechanical activation maps demonstrated the capability of EWI to localize the pacing sites and characterize the bundle branch block activation sequence transmurally in patients with CRT. In patients with AFL, the EWI propagation patterns obtained with EWI were in excellent agreement with those obtained from invasive intracardiac mapping studies. CONCLUSIONS Our findings demonstrate the potential capability of EWI to aid in the assessment and follow-up of patients undergoing CRT pacing therapy and atrial ablation, with preliminary validation in vivo.


Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2011

Differences in Repeating Patterns of Complex Fractionated Left Atrial Electrograms in Longstanding Persistent as Compared with Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation

Edward J. Ciaccio; Angelo B. Biviano; William Whang; John A. Vest; Alok Gambhir; Andrew J. Einstein; Hasan Garan

Background— Complex fractionated atrial electrograms (CFAE) are morphologically more uniform in persistent longstanding as compared with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF). It was hypothesized that this may result from a greater degree of repetitiveness in CFAE patterns at disparate left atrial (LA) sites in longstanding AF. Methods and Results— CFAEs were obtained from recording sites outside the 4 pulmonary vein (PV) ostia and at a posterior and an anterior LA site during paroxysmal and longstanding persistent AF (10 patients each, 120 sequences total). To quantify repetitiveness in CFAE, the dominant frequency was measured from ensemble spectra using 8.4-second sequences, and repetitiveness was calculated by 2 novel techniques: linear prediction and Fourier reconstruction methods. Lower prediction and reconstruction errors were considered indicative of increasing repetitiveness and decreasing randomness. In patients with paroxysmal AF, CFAE pattern repetitiveness was significantly lower (randomness higher) at antral sites outside PV ostia as compared with LA free wall sites (P<0.001). In longstanding AF, repetitiveness increased outside the PV ostia, especially outside the left superior PV ostium, and diminished at the LA free wall sites. The result was that in persistent AF, there were no significant site-specific differences in CFAE repetitiveness at the selected LA locations used in this study. Average dominant frequency magnitude was 5.32±0.29 Hz in paroxysmal AF and higher in longstanding AF, at 6.27±0.13 Hz (P<0.001), with the frequency of local activation approaching a common upper bound for all sites. Conclusions— In paroxysmal AF, CFAE repetitiveness is low and randomness high outside the PVs, particularly the left superior PV. As evolution to persistent longstanding AF occurs, CFAE repetitiveness becomes more uniformly distributed at disparate sites, possibly signifying an increasing number of drivers from remote PVs.


IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control | 2015

Intracardiac myocardial elastography in canines and humans in vivo

Julien Grondin; Elaine Wan; Alok Gambhir; Hasan Garan; Elisa E. Konofagou

Intracardiac echocardiography (ICE) is a useful imaging modality which is used during RF ablation procedures to identify anatomical structures. Utilizing ICE in conjunction with myocardial elastography (ME) can provide additional information on the mechanical properties of cardiac tissue and provide information on mechanical changes caused by ablation. The objective of this study was to demonstrate that ICE can be used at high frame rate using a diverging beam transmit sequence to image myocardial strain and differentiate myocardial tissue properties before, during, and after ablation for a clinical ablation procedure. In this feasibility study, three normal canines and eight patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) were studied in vivo. A 5.8-MHz ICE transducer was used to image the heart with a diverging beam transmit method achieving 1200 frames per second (fps). Cumulative axial displacement estimation was performed using 1-D cross-correlation with a window size of 2.7 mm and 95% overlap. Axial cumulative strains were estimated in the left atrium (LA) and right atrium (RA) using a least-squares estimator with a kernel of 2 mm on the axial displacements. In the canine case, radial thickening was detected in the lateral wall and in the interatrial septum during LA emptying. For AF patients, the mean absolute strain in the ablated region was lower (6.7 ± 3.1%) than before the ablation (17.4 ± 9.3%) in LA at the end of the LA emptying phase. In the cavotricuspid isthmus (CTI) region, mean absolute strain magnitude at the end of the RA emptying phase was found to be higher during ablation (43.0 ± 18.1%) compared with after ablation (33.7 ± 15.8%). Myocardial strains in the LA of an AF patient were approximately 2.6 times lower in the ablated region than before ablation. This initial feasibility indicates that ME can be used as a new imaging modality in conjunction with ICE in RF ablation guidance and lesion monitoring.


Computers in Biology and Medicine | 2015

Assessing the atrial electromechanical coupling during atrial focal tachycardia, flutter, and fibrillation using electromechanical wave imaging in humans

Jean Provost; Alexandre Costet; Elaine Y. Wan; Alok Gambhir; William Whang; Hasan Garan; Elisa E. Konofagou

Minimally-invasive treatments of cardiac arrhythmias such as radio-frequency ablation are gradually gaining importance in clinical practice but still lack a noninvasive imaging modality which provides insight into the source or focus of an arrhythmia. Cardiac deformations imaged at high temporal and spatial resolution can be used to elucidate the electrical activation sequence in normal and paced human subjects non-invasively and could potentially aid to better plan and monitor ablation-based arrhythmia treatments. In this study, a novel ultrasound-based method is presented that can be used to quantitatively characterize focal and reentrant arrhythmias. Spatio-temporal maps of the full-view of the atrial and ventricular mechanics were obtained in a single heartbeat, revealing with otherwise unobtainable detail the electromechanical patterns of atrial flutter, fibrillation, and tachycardia in humans. During focal arrhythmias such as premature ventricular complex and focal atrial tachycardia, the previously developed electromechanical wave imaging methodology is hereby shown capable of identifying the location of the focal zone and the subsequent propagation of cardiac activation. During reentrant arrhythmias such as atrial flutter and fibrillation, Fourier analysis of the strains revealed highly correlated mechanical and electrical cycle lengths and propagation patterns. High frame rate ultrasound imaging of the heart can be used non-invasively and in real time, to characterize the lesser-known mechanical aspects of atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, also potentially assisting treatment planning for intraoperative and longitudinal monitoring of arrhythmias.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2014

Electromechanical Wave Imaging of Biologically and Electrically Paced Canine Hearts in Vivo

Alexandre Costet; Jean Provost; Alok Gambhir; Yevgeniy Bobkov; Peter Danilo; Gerard J.J. Boink; Michael R. Rosen; Elisa E. Konofagou

Electromechanical wave imaging (EWI) has been show capable of directly and entirely non-invasively mapping the trans mural electromechanical activation in all four cardiac chambers in vivo. In this study, we assessed EWI repeatability and reproducibility, as well as its capability of localizing electronic and, for the first time, biological pacing locations in closed-chest, conscious canines. Electromechanical activation was obtained in six conscious animals during normal sinus rhythm (NSR) and idioventricular rhythms occurring in dogs with complete heart block instrumented with electronic and biologic pacemakers (EPM and BPM respectively). After atrioventricular node ablation, dogs were implanted with an EPM in the right ventricular (RV) endocardial apex (n = 4) and two additionally received a BPM at the left ventricular (LV) epicardial base (n = 2). EWI was performed trans thoracically during NSR, BPM and EPM pacing, in conscious dogs, using an unfocused transmit sequence at 2000 frames/s. During NSR, the EW originated at the right atrium (RA), propagated to the left atrium (LA) and emerged from multiple sources in both ventricles. During EPM, the EW originated at the RV apex and propagated throughout both ventricles. During BPM, the EW originated from the LV basal lateral wall and subsequently propagated throughout the ventricles. EWI differentiated BPM from EPM and NSR and identified the distinct pacing origins. Isochrone comparison indicated that EWI was repeatable and reliable. These findings thus indicate the potential for EWI to serve as a simple, non-invasive and direct imaging technology for mapping and characterizing arrhythmias as well as the treatments thereof.


Heart Rhythm | 2016

Validation of electromechanical wave imaging in a canine model during pacing and sinus rhythm

Julien Grondin; Alexandre Costet; Ethan Bunting; Alok Gambhir; Hasan Garan; Elaine Wan; Elisa E. Konofagou

BACKGROUND Accurate determination of regional areas of arrhythmic triggers is of key interest to diagnose arrhythmias and optimize their treatment. Electromechanical wave imaging (EWI) is an ultrasound technique that can image the transient deformation in the myocardium after electrical activation and therefore has the potential to detect and characterize location of triggers of arrhythmias. OBJECTIVES The objectives of this study were to investigate the relationship between the electromechanical and the electrical activation of the left ventricular (LV) endocardial surface during epicardial and endocardial pacing and during sinus rhythm as well as to map the distribution of electromechanical delays. METHODS In this study, 6 canines were investigated. Two external electrodes were sutured onto the epicardial surface of the LV. A 64-electrode basket catheter was inserted through the apex of the LV. Ultrasound channel data were acquired at 2000 frames/s during epicardial and endocardial pacing and during sinus rhythm. Electromechanical and electrical activation maps were synchronously obtained from the ultrasound data and the basket catheter, respectively. RESULTS The mean correlation coefficient between electromechanical and electrical activation was 0.81 for epicardial anterior pacing, 0.79 for epicardial lateral pacing, 0.69 for endocardial pacing, and 0.56 for sinus rhythm. CONCLUSION The electromechanical activation sequence determined by EWI follows the electrical activation sequence and more specifically in the case of pacing. This finding is of key interest in the role that EWI can play in the detection of the anatomical source of arrhythmias and the planning of pacing therapies such as cardiovascular resynchronization therapy.


IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control | 2015

Atrial electromechanical cycle length mapping in paced canine hearts in vivo

Alexandre Costet; Ethan Bunting; Julien Grondin; Alok Gambhir; Elisa E. Konofagou

Atrial arrhythmias affect millions of people worldwide. Characterization and study of arrhythmias in the atria in the clinic is currently performed point by point using mapping catheters capable of generating maps of the electrical activation rate or cycle length. In this paper, we describe a new ultrasound-based mapping technique called electromechanical cycle length mapping (ECLM) capable of estimating the electromechanical activation rate, or cycle length, i.e., the rate of the mechanical activation of the myocardium which follows the electrical activation. ECLM relies on frequency analysis of the incremental strain within the atria and can be performed in a single acquisition. ECLM was validated in a canine model paced from the left atrial appendage, against pacing rates within the reported range of cycle lengths previously measured during atrial arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillation. Correlation between the global estimated electromechanical cycle lengths and pacing rates was shown to be excellent (slope = 0.983, intercept = 3.91, r2 = 0.9999). The effect of the number of cardiac cycles on the performance of ECLM was also investigated and the reproducibility of ECLM was demonstrated (error between consecutive acquisitions for all pacing rates: 6.3 ± 4.3%). These findings indicate the potential of ECLM for noninvasively characterizing atrial arrhythmias and provide feedback on the treatment planning of catheter ablation procedures in the clinic.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2013

Intracardiac myocardial elastography in humans in vivo during radio-frequency ablation

Julien Grondin; Elaine Wan; Alok Gambhir; Stanley J. Okrasinski; Hasan Garan; Elisa E. Konofagou

Intracardiac echocardiography (ICE) is commonly used during radio-frequency (RF) ablation procedures for procedural guidance. Besides its imaging function, ICE could be used to assess mechanical properties of the myocardium to improve the ablation outcome. The objective of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of imaging myocardial strains in vivo within the same imaging plane as ICE at high temporal resolution. A 5.8-MHz center frequency ICE probe was used to image the heart of two humans with atrial arrhythmias in vivo before and after RF ablation at high frame rates (1200 Hz), and the channel data were acquired on a clinical ultrasound system. The RF signals were reconstructed on a 9cm depth and 90° field of view region and axial cumulative displacement estimation was performed using 1-D cross-correlation using a window size of 2.6 mm and 95% overlap. Cumulative axial strains were obtained from the displacements using a least-squares estimator with a kernel of 5.1 mm. Cumulative axial strains i...


internaltional ultrasonics symposium | 2011

Non-invasive Electromechanical Wave Imaging of atrial, supraventricular and ventricular cardiac conduction disorders in canines and humans

Jean Provost; Alok Gambhir; Stéphane Thiébaut; Vu Thanh-Hieu Nguyen; John A. Vest; Hasan Garan; Elisa E. Konofagou

Electromechanical Wave Imaging (EWI) is a novel ultrasound-based imaging modality for the mapping of the electromechanical wave (EW), i.e., the transient deformations occurring in immediate response to the electrical activation. The correlation between the EW and the electrical activation has been established in canines in previous studies. However, the methods used previously to map the EW required the reconstruction of images over multiple cardiac cycles, precluding the application of EWI for non-periodic arrhythmia such as fibrillation. In this study, we present a new unfocused sequences based on flash emissions to image the entire heart at very high frame rates (2000 fps) during free breathing in a single heartbeat and compare it to the automatic composite technique (ACT), which is based on acquisition spanning multiple heart cycles and is used to image normal human subjects during sinus rhythm. Feasibility of flash-beam sequences is assessed by imaging the atria and ventricles of closed-chest, conscious canines during sinus rhythm and during right-ventricular pacing following atrioventricular dissociation, i.e., a non-periodic rhythm and during ventricular fibrillation in one open-chest canine. These results indicate that EWI can be used for the characterization of non-periodic arrhythmia in conditions close to the clinical setting, in a single heartbeat, and during free-breathing.

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Jean Provost

PSL Research University

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William Whang

Columbia University Medical Center

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