John A. Hauck
Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.
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Featured researches published by John A. Hauck.
Circulation | 1999
Charles C. Gornick; Stuart W. Adler; Brian D. Pederson; John A. Hauck; Jeffrey Robert Budd; Jeff Schweitzer
BACKGROUND Improvements in cardiac mapping are required to advance our understanding and treatment of arrhythmias. This study validated a new noncontact multielectrode array catheter and accompanying analysis system to provide electroanatomic mapping of the entire left ventricular (LV) endocardium during a single beat. METHODS AND RESULTS A 9F 64-electrode balloon array catheter with an inflated size of 1.8x4.6 cm was used to simultaneously record electrical potentials generated by the heart and locate a standard electrophysiology (EP) catheter within the same chamber. By use of the recorded location of the EP-catheter tip, LV geometry was determined. Array potentials served as inputs to a high-order boundary-element method to produce 3360 potential points on the endocardial surface translatable into electrograms or color-coded activation maps. Three methods of validation were used: (1) driven electrodes in an in vitro tank were located; (2) waveforms generated from the array catheter were compared with catheter contact waveforms in canine LV; and (3) sites of local LV endocardial activation were located and marked with radiofrequency lesions. Tank testing located a driven electrode to within 2.33+/-0.44 mm. Correlation of timing and morphology of computed versus contact electrograms was 0.966. Radiofrequency lesions marked 17 endocardial pacing sites to within 4.0+/-3.2 mm. CONCLUSIONS This new system provides anatomically accurate endocardial isopotential mapping during a single cardiac cycle. The locator component enabled placement of a separate EP catheter to any site within the mapped chamber.
Circulation | 1999
Alan H. Kadish; John A. Hauck; Brian D. Pederson; Graydon Ernest Beatty; Charles C. Gornick
BACKGROUND Endocardial mapping of sustained arrhythmias has traditionally been performed with a roving diagnostic catheter. Although this approach is adequate for many tachyarrhythmias, it has limitations. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a novel noncontact mapping system for assessing atrial tachyarrhythmias. METHODS AND RESULTS The mapping system consists of a 9F multielectrode-array balloon catheter that has 64 active electrodes and ring electrodes for emitting a locator signal. The locator signal was used to construct a 3-dimensional right atrial map; it was independently validated and was highly accurate. Virtual electrograms were calculated at 3360 endocardial sites in the right atrium. We evaluated right atrial activation by positioning the balloon catheter in the mid right atrium via a femoral venous approach. Experiments were performed on 12 normal mongrel dogs. The mean correlation coefficient between contact and virtual electrograms was 0.80+/-0.12 during sinus rhythm. Fifty episodes of atrial flutter induced in 11 animals were evaluated. In the majority of experiments, complete or almost complete reentrant circuits could be identified within the right atrium. Mean correlation coefficient between virtual and contact electrograms was 0.85+/-0.17 in atrial flutter. One hundred fifty-six episodes of pacing-induced atrial fibrillation were evaluated in 11 animals. Several distinct patterns of right atrial activation were seen, including single-activation wave fronts and multiple simultaneous-activation wave fronts. Mean correlation coefficient between virtual and contact electrograms during atrial fibrillation was 0.81+/-0.18. The accuracy of electrogram reconstruction was lower at sites >4.0 cm from the balloon center and at sites with a high spatial complexity of electrical activation. CONCLUSIONS This novel noncontact mapping system can evaluate conduction patterns during sinus rhythm, demonstrate reentry during atrial flutter, and describe right atrial activation during atrial fibrillation. The accuracy of electrogram reconstruction was good at sites <4.0 cm from the balloon center, and thus the system has the ability to perform high-resolution multisite mapping of atrial tachyarrhythmias in vivo.
computer based medical systems | 1988
John A. Hauck
A description is given of the development of the cardiac volume computer, which exemplifies the successful incorporation of a commercial microcomputer host into a sophisticated medical diagnostic tool. This low-cost system features capabilities previously not widely available to the clinician or researcher, such as accurate ventricular volume waveform and real-time pressure-volume, loops, while presenting an intuitive icon-based and mouse-driven user interface.<<ETX>>
Archive | 1995
Jeffrey Robert Budd; Graydon Ernest Beatty; John A. Hauck
Archive | 1991
John A. Hauck; Brian D. Pederson
Archive | 2000
Graydon Ernest Beatty; Jeffrey Robert Budd; John A. Hauck
Archive | 1995
Jeffrey Robert Budd; John A. Hauck; Graydon Ernest Beatty
Archive | 1993
John A. Hauck; Arthur L. Olive
Archive | 1990
John A. Hauck; Brian D. Pederson
Archive | 2000
Jeffrey Robert Budd; Graydon Ernest Beatty; John A. Hauck