Jeremy D. Dando
St. Jude Medical
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jeremy D. Dando.
Circulation | 2008
Srinivas R. Dukkipati; Richard Philip Mallozzi; Ehud J Schmidt; Godtfred Holmvang; Andre d'Avila; Renee Guhde; Robert David Darrow; Glenn S. Slavin; Maggie Fung; Zachary J. Malchano; Greg Kampa; Jeremy D. Dando; Christina D. McPherson; Thomas Kwok-Fah Foo; Jeremy N. Ruskin; Charles Lucian Dumoulin; Vivek Y. Reddy
Background— X-ray fluoroscopy constitutes the fundamental imaging modality for catheter visualization during interventional electrophysiology procedures. The minimal tissue discriminative capability of fluoroscopy is mitigated in part by the use of electroanatomic mapping systems and enhanced by the integration of preacquired 3-dimensional imaging of the heart with computed tomographic or magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. A more ideal paradigm might be to use intraprocedural MR imaging to directly image and guide catheter mapping procedures. Methods and Results— An MR imaging–based electroanatomic mapping system was designed to assess the feasibility of navigating catheters to the left ventricle in vivo using MR tracking of microcoils incorporated into the catheters, measuring intracardiac ventricular electrograms, and integrating this information with 3-dimensional MR angiography and myocardial delayed enhancement images to allow ventricular substrate mapping. In all animals (4 normal, and 10 chronically infarcted swine), after transseptal puncture under fluoroscopic guidance, catheters were successfully navigated to the left ventricle with MR tracking (13 to 15 frames per second) by both transseptal and retrograde aortic approaches. Electrogram artifacts related to the MR imaging gradient pulses were successfully removed with analog and digital signal processing. In all animals, it was possible to map the entire left ventricle and to project electrogram voltage amplitude maps to identify the scarred myocardium. Conclusions— It is possible to use MR tracking to navigate catheters to the left ventricle, to measure electrogram activity, and to render accurate 3-dimensional voltage maps in a porcine model of chronic myocardial infarction, completely in the MR imaging environment. Myocardial delayed enhancement guidance provided dense sampling of the proximity of the infarct and accurate localization of complex infarcts.
Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2009
Ehud J. Schmidt; Richard Philip Mallozzi; Aravinda Thiagalingam; Godtfred Holmvang; Andre d'Avila; Renee Guhde; Robert David Darrow; Glenn S. Slavin; Maggie Fung; Jeremy D. Dando; Lori Foley; Charles Lucian Dumoulin; Vivek Y. Reddy
Background—The MRI-compatible electrophysiology system previously used for MR-guided left ventricular electroanatomic mapping was enhanced with improved MR tracking, an MR-compatible radiofrequency ablation system and higher-resolution imaging sequences to enable mapping, ablation, and ablation monitoring in smaller cardiac structures. MR-tracked navigation was performed to the left atrium (LA) and atrioventricular (AV) node, followed by LA electroanatomic mapping and radiofrequency ablation of the pulmonary veins (PVs) and AV node. Methods and Results—One ventricular ablation, 7 PV ablations, 3 LA mappings, and 3 AV node ablations were conducted. Three MRI-compatible devices (ablation/mapping catheter, torqueable sheath, stimulation/pacing catheter) were used, each with 4 to 5 tracking microcoils. Transseptal puncture was performed under x-ray, with all other procedural steps performed in the MRI. Preacquired MRI roadmaps served for real-time catheter navigation. Simultaneous tracking of 3 devices was performed at 13 frames per second. LA mapping and PV radiofrequency ablation were performed using tracked ablation catheters and sheaths. Ablation points were registered and verified after ablation using 3D myocardial delayed enhancement and postmortem gross tissue examination. Complete LA electroanatomic mapping was achieved in 3 of 3 pigs, Right inferior PV circumferential ablation was achieved in 3 of 7 pigs, with incomplete isolation caused by limited catheter deflection. During AV node ablation, ventricular pacing was performed, 3 devices were simultaneously tracked, and intracardiac ECGs were displayed. 3D myocardial delayed enhancement visualized node injury 2 minutes after ablation. AV node block succeeded in 2 of 3 pigs, with 1 temporary block. Conclusions—LA mapping, PV radiofrequency ablation, and AV node ablation were demonstrated under MRI guidance. Intraprocedural 3D myocardial delayed enhancement assessed lesion positional accuracy and dimensions.
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2011
Douglas S. Holmes; Jeffrey M. Fish; Israel A. Byrd; Jeremy D. Dando; Steven J. Fowler; Hong Cao; James A. Jensen; Harry Puryear; Larry Chinitz
RF Ablation Lesion Depth Estimation Using Contact Sensing. Background: Transmural lesions are essential for efficacious ablation. There are, however, no accurate means to estimate lesion depth.
Archive | 2003
Guy P. Vanney; Jeremy D. Dando; Joshua L. Dudney
Archive | 2007
James V. Kauphusman; Huisun Wang; Jeremy D. Dando; Harry Puryear
Archive | 2005
Guy P. Vanney; Jeremy D. Dando
Archive | 2006
Huisun Wang; Jeremy D. Dando; Dale E. Just; Allen P. Moore
Archive | 2007
Kirk S. Honour; Michael Johnson; Gabriel A. Mouchawar; Jeremy D. Dando; Christine M. Byam
Archive | 2012
Huisun S. Wang; Jeremy D. Dando; Harry Puryear
Archive | 2010
Jeffrey M. Fish; Israel A. Byrd; Jeremy D. Dando