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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan Chrispin is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan Chrispin.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2015

Obesity, Exercise, Obstructive Sleep Apnea, and Modifiable Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors in Atrial Fibrillation

Jared D. Miller; Konstantinos N. Aronis; Jonathan Chrispin; Kaustubha D. Patil; Joseph E. Marine; Seth S. Martin; Michael J. Blaha; Roger S. Blumenthal; Hugh Calkins

Classically, the 3 pillars of atrial fibrillation (AF) management have included anticoagulation for prevention of thromboembolism, rhythm control, and rate control. In both prevention and management of AF, a growing body of evidence supports an increased role for comprehensive cardiac risk factor modification (RFM), herein defined as management of traditional modifiable cardiac risk factors, weight loss, and exercise. In this narrative review, we summarize the evidence demonstrating the importance of each facet of RFM in AF prevention and therapy. Additionally, we review emerging data on the importance of weight loss and cardiovascular exercise in prevention and management of AF.


Heart Rhythm | 2016

Lack of regional association between atrial late gadolinium enhancement on cardiac magnetic resonance and atrial fibrillation rotors

Jonathan Chrispin; Esra Gucuk Ipek; Sohail Zahid; Adityo Prakosa; Mohammadali Habibi; David D. Spragg; Joseph E. Marine; Hiroshi Ashikaga; John Rickard; Natalia A. Trayanova; Stefan L. Zimmerman; Vadim Zipunnikov; Ronald D. Berger; Hugh Calkins; Saman Nazarian

BACKGROUND The extent of left atrial (LA) late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), as a surrogate for fibrosis, has been associated with atrial fibrillation (AF) recurrence after catheter ablation. Furthermore, there is ex vivo evidence that islands of fibrosis may anchor fibrillatory rotors. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to examine the anatomical association of AF rotors with LA and right atrial (RA) LGE on cardiac magnetic resonance. METHODS The cohort included 9 patients with persistent AF (mean age 61.1 ± 9.7 years) who underwent LGE cardiac magnetic resonance before AF ablation using the focal impulse and rotor modulation system. The extent of LA and RA LGE was quantified globally and in each of the 7 sectors: LA posterior/inferior wall, anterior wall, roof, left and right pulmonary vein antra, and RA lateral and septal regions. The multivariable association of rotor incidence with global and per sector LGE extent was examined using multivariable Bernoulli logistic regression estimated by generalized estimating equations. RESULTS The mean RA and LA volumes were 113.2 ± 37.31 and 143.03 ± 58.25 mL, respectively. The mean RA and LA LGE burden was 17.2% ± 11.0% and 17.4% ± 14.4%, respectively. A total of 18 LA rotors and 9 RA rotors were identified in all patients. No univariable or multivariable association was observed between global or per sector LGE extent and focal impulse and rotor modulation rotor incidence. CONCLUSION In this cohort of patients, there was no association between AF rotor incidence and the global or regional extent of RA and LA LGE.


Circulation Research | 2015

Clinical Management and Prevention of Sudden Cardiac Death

Omair Yousuf; Jonathan Chrispin; Gordon F. Tomaselli; Ronald D. Berger

Despite the revolutionary advancements in the past 3 decades in the treatment of ventricular tachyarrhythmias with device-based therapy, sudden cardiac death (SCD) remains an enormous public health burden. Survivors of SCD are generally at high risk for recurrent events. The clinical management of such patients requires a multidisciplinary approach from postresuscitative care to a thorough cardiovascular investigation in an attempt to identify the underlying substrate, with potential to eliminate or modify the triggers through catheter ablation and ultimately an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) for prompt treatment of recurrences in those at risk. Early recognition of low left ventricular ejection fraction as a strong predictor of death and association of ventricular arrhythmias with sudden death led to significant investigation with antiarrhythmic drugs. The lack of efficacy and the proarrhythmic effects of drugs catalyzed the development and investigation of the ICD through several major clinical trials that proved the efficacy of ICD as a bedrock tool to detect and promptly treat life-threatening arrhythmias. The ICD therapy is routinely used for primary prevention of SCD in patients with cardiomyopathy and high risk inherited arrhythmic conditions and secondary prevention in survivors of sudden cardiac arrest. This compendium will review the clinical management of those surviving SCD and discuss landmark studies of antiarrhythmic drugs, ICD, and cardiac resynchronization therapy in the primary and secondary prevention of SCD.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2014

Clinician's Guide to the Updated ABCs of Cardiovascular Disease Prevention

Payal Kohli; Seamus P. Whelton; Steven Hsu; Clyde W. Yancy; Neil J. Stone; Jonathan Chrispin; Nisha A. Gilotra; Brian A. Houston; M. Dominique Ashen; Seth S. Martin; Parag H. Joshi; John W. McEvoy; Ty J. Gluckman; Erin D. Michos; Michael J. Blaha; Roger S. Blumenthal

To facilitate the guideline-based implementation of treatment recommendations in the ambulatory setting and to encourage participation in the multiple preventive health efforts that exist, we have organized several recent guideline updates into a simple ABCDEF approach. We would remind clinicians that evidence-based medicine is meant to inform recommendations but that synthesis of patient-specific data and use of appropriate clinical judgment in each individual situation is ultimately preferred.


Europace | 2016

Factors impacting complication rates for catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation from 2003 to 2015

Eunice Yang; Esra Gucuk Ipek; Muhammad Balouch; Yuliya Mints; Jonathan Chrispin; Joseph E. Marine; Ronald D. Berger; Hiroshi Ashikaga; Jack Rickard; Hugh Calkins; Saman Nazarian; David D. Spragg

Aims Complications from catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) are well described. Changing aspects of AF ablation including patient populations referred, institutional experience, and emerging catheter and pharmacological options may impact complication rates. We assessed procedural complication trends in AF ablation patients from 2003‐2015 to identify what factors affect adverse event rates. Methods and results We evaluated consecutively enrolled patients undergoing initial AF ablation from 2003 through 2015. Statistical analyses were performed to identify predictors of increased risk for major complications, which were defined as death, stroke, atrio‐oesophageal fistula, phrenic nerve injury, cardiovascular events requiring blood transfusions or procedural interventions, or non‐cardiovascular events requiring intervention. A total of 1475 patients (mean age 59.5 ± 10.5, 82% male) were evaluated. Major complications occurred in 3.9% (n = 58) of cases, including vascular access‐site haematoma (1.3%), cardiac tamponade (1.1%), and cerebrovascular accident (CVA) (0.9%). Univariate analysis revealed increased risk of complications associated with hypertension (P = 0.048), CHA2DS2VASc score ≥1 (P = 0.015), and early institutional experience (P = 0.003). Populations with higher CHA2DS2VASc scores underwent AF ablation more frequently over time (P < 0.001). Novel catheters and anticoagulants did not appreciably affect complication rates. Multivariate analysis adjusting for hypertension, CHA2DS2VASc score, and institutional experience showed that higher CHA2DS2VASc score and early institutional experience were independent predictors of adverse events. Conclusion Patient characteristics reflected in CHA2DS2VASc scoring and early institutional experience predict increased complication rates following AF ablation. Despite more patients with higher CHA2DS2VASc scores undergoing AF ablation, complication rates fell over time as institutional experience increased.


Europace | 2016

Clinical predictors of cardiac magnetic resonance late gadolinium enhancement in patients with atrial fibrillation

Jonathan Chrispin; Esra Gucuk Ipek; Mohammadali Habibi; Eunice Yang; David D. Spragg; Joseph E. Marine; Hiroshi Ashikaga; John Rickard; Ronald D. Berger; Stefan L. Zimmerman; Hugh Calkins; Saman Nazarian

Aims This study aims to examine the association of clinical co-morbidities with the presence of left atrial (LA) late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) on cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR). Previous studies have established the severity of LA LGE to be associated with atrial fibrillation (AF) recurrence following AF ablation. We sought to determine whether baseline clinical characteristics were associated with LGE extent among patients presenting for an initial AF ablation. Methods and results The cohort consisted of 179 consecutive patients with no prior cardiac ablation procedures who underwent pre-procedure LGE-CMR. The extent of LA LGE for each patient was calculated using the image intensity ratio, normalized to the mean blood pool intensity, corresponding to a bipolar voltage ≤0.3 mV. The association of LGE extent with baseline clinical characteristics was examined using non-parametric and multivariable models. The mean age of the cohort was 60.9 ± 9.6 years and 128 (72%) were male. In total, 56 (31%) patients had persistent AF. The mean LA volume was 118.4 ± 41.6 mL, and the mean LA LGE extent was 14.1 ± 10.4%. There was no association with any clinical variables with LGE extent by quartiles in the multivariable model. Extent of LGE as a continuous variable was positively, but weakly associated with LA volume in a multivariable model adjusting for age, body mass index, AF persistence, and left ventricular ejection fraction (1.5% scar/mL, P = 0.038). Conclusion In a cohort of patients presenting for initial AF ablation, the presence of pre-ablation LA LGE extent was weakly, but positively associated with increasing LA volume.


Clinical Cardiology | 2017

Impact of rotor temperospatial stability on acute and one-year atrial fibrillation ablation outcomes.

Muhammad Balouch; Esra Gucuk Ipek; Jonathan Chrispin; Rizma J. Bajwa; Tarek Zghaib; Ronald D. Berger; Hiroshi Ashikaga; Saman Nazarian; Joseph E. Marine; Hugh Calkins; David D. Spragg

The utility of rotor ablation using commercially available systems as an adjunct to pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is controversial. Variable results may stem from heterogeneous practice patterns. We investigated whether a prespecified protocol to determine temperospatial rotor stability improved acute and intermediate outcomes following rotor ablation.


JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology | 2018

Multimodal Examination of Atrial Fibrillation Substrate: Correlation of Left Atrial Bipolar Voltage Using Multi-Electrode Fast Automated Mapping, Point-by-Point Mapping, and Magnetic Resonance Image Intensity Ratio

Tarek Zghaib; Ali Keramati; Jonathan Chrispin; Dong Huang; Muhammad Balouch; Luisa Ciuffo; Ronald D. Berger; Joseph E. Marine; Hiroshi Ashikaga; Hugh Calkins; Saman Nazarian; David D. Spragg

Background Bipolar voltage mapping, as part of atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation, is traditionally performed in a point-by-point (PBP) approach using single-tip ablation catheters. Alternative techniques for fibrosis-delineation include fast-anatomical mapping (FAM) with multi-electrode circular catheters, and late gadolinium-enhanced magnetic-resonance imaging (LGE-MRI). The correlation between PBP, FAM, and LGE-MRI fibrosis assessment is unknown. Objective In this study, we examined AF substrate using different modalities (PBP, FAM, and LGE-MRI mapping) in patients presenting for an AF ablation. Methods LGE-MRI was performed pre-ablation in 26 patients (73% males, age 63±8years). Local image-intensity ratio (IIR) was used to normalize myocardial intensities. PBP- and FAM-voltage maps were acquired, in sinus rhythm, prior to ablation and co-registered to LGE-MRI. Results Mean bipolar voltage for all 19,087 FAM voltage points was 0.88±1.27mV and average IIR was 1.08±0.18. In an adjusted mixed-effects model, each unit increase in local IIR was associated with 57% decrease in bipolar voltage (p<0.0001). IIR of >0.74 corresponded to bipolar voltage <0.5 mV. A total of 1554 PBP-mapping points were matched to the nearest FAM-point. In an adjusted mixed-effects model, log-FAM bipolar voltage was significantly associated with log-PBP bipolar voltage (ß=0.36, p<0.0001). At low-voltages, FAM-mapping distribution was shifted to the left compared to PBP-mapping; at intermediate voltages, FAM and PBP voltages were overlapping; and at high voltages, FAM exceeded PBP-voltages. Conclusion LGE-MRI, FAM and PBP-mapping show good correlation in delineating electro-anatomical AF substrate. Each approach has fundamental technical characteristics, the awareness of which allows proper assessment of atrial fibrosis.


Nature Biomedical Engineering | 2018

Personalized virtual-heart technology for guiding the ablation of infarct-related ventricular tachycardia

Adityo Prakosa; Hermenegild Arevalo; Dongdong Deng; Patrick M. Boyle; Plamen Nikolov; Hiroshi Ashikaga; Joshua Blauer; Elyar Ghafoori; Carolyn J. Park; Robert C. Blake; Frederick T. Han; Robert S. MacLeod; Henry R. Halperin; David J. Callans; Ravi Ranjan; Jonathan Chrispin; Saman Nazarian; Natalia A. Trayanova

Ventricular tachycardia (VT), which can lead to sudden cardiac death, occurs frequently in patients with myocardial infarction. Catheter-based radio-frequency ablation of cardiac tissue has achieved only modest efficacy, owing to the inaccurate identification of ablation targets by current electrical mapping techniques, which can lead to extensive lesions and to a prolonged, poorly tolerated procedure. Here, we show that personalized virtual-heart technology based on cardiac imaging and computational modelling can identify optimal infarct-related VT ablation targets in retrospective animal (five swine) and human studies (21 patients), as well as in a prospective feasibility study (five patients). We first assessed, using retrospective studies (one of which included a proportion of clinical images with artefacts), the capability of the technology to determine the minimum-size ablation targets for eradicating all VTs. In the prospective study, VT sites predicted by the technology were targeted directly, without relying on prior electrical mapping. The approach could improve infarct-related VT ablation guidance, where accurate identification of patient-specific optimal targets could be achieved on a personalized virtual heart before the clinical procedure.A personalized virtual-heart model that determines optimal radio-frequency ablation targets for infarct-related tachycardia is validated in retrospective large-animal and patient studies, and in a prospective study in patients.


Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2018

Increased rates of atrial fibrillation recurrence following pulmonary vein isolation in overweight and obese patients

Bhradeev Sivasambu; Muhammad Balouch; Tarek Zghaib; Rizma J. Bajwa; Jonathan Chrispin; Ronald D. Berger; Hiroshi Ashikaga; Saman Nazarian; Joseph E. Marine; Hugh Calkins; David D. Spragg

Catheter ablation is common for patients with symptomatic, drug‐refractory atrial fibrillation (AF). Obesity is a known risk factor for incident AF. The impact of obesity on AF ablation outcomes is incompletely understood. We sought to determine the impact of elevated body mass index (BMI) on pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) procedural outcomes and associated complications.

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Hugh Calkins

Johns Hopkins University

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Ronald D. Berger

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Saman Nazarian

University of Pennsylvania

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Joseph E. Marine

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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David D. Spragg

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Hiroshi Ashikaga

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Harikrishna Tandri

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Joao A.C. Lima

Johns Hopkins University

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