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How a new system maps the heart's left atrium for studies

By Mehringer NJ & McVeigh ER.·2025·View original on Europe PMC

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Original publication title: A Left Atrial Positioning System to Enable Follow-up and Cohort Studies.

Plain-English summary

Researchers have developed a new system called the Left Atrial Positioning System (LAPS) that helps convert complex 3D images of the heart's left atrium into a simpler 2D format. They tested this system using advanced imaging techniques on 30 subjects and found that it accurately measures the left atrium's size and shape, with only a small error in the measurements. This system can divide the left atrium into 24 different areas, making it easier to visualize and compare data over time or between different groups of patients. Overall, the LAPS is automatic, reliable, and adaptable, which could be very useful for future heart studies.

Abstract

<h4>Objective</h4>We present a new algorithm to automatically convert 3-dimensional left atrium surface meshes into a standard 2-dimensional space: a Left Atrial Positioning System (LAPS).<h4>Methods</h4>Forty-five contrast-enhanced 4-dimensional computed tomography datasets were collected from 30 subjects. The left atrium volume was segmented using a trained neural network and converted into a surface mesh. LAPS coordinates were calculated on each mesh by computing lines of longitude and latitude on the surface of the mesh with reference to the center of the posterior wall and the mitral valve. LAPS accuracy was evaluated with one-way transfer of coordinates from a template mesh to a synthetic ground truth, which was created by registering the template mesh and pre-calculated LAPS coordinates to a target mesh. The Euclidian distance error was measured between each test node and its ground truth location.<h4>Results</h4>The median point transfer error was 2.13 mm between follow-up scans of the same subject (n = 15) and 3.99 mm between different subjects (n = 30). The left atrium was divided into 24 anatomic regions and represented on a 2D square diagram.<h4>Conclusion</h4>The Left Atrial Positioning System is fully automatic, accurate, robust to anatomic variation, and has flexible visualization for mapping data in the left atrium.<h4>Significance</h4>This provides a framework for comparing regional LA surface data values in both follow-up and cohort studies.

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Original publication on Europe PMC: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/40424113