It has been a while since I began the journey of my PhD. I remember that, especially in the first months, I spent a lot of my time reading about atrial fibrillation (AF), therapies to treat it, like pulmonary vein isolation (PVI), techniques to characterise atrial substrate, such as late gadolinium enhancement MRI (LGE-MRI) and magnitudes describing this substrate, including low voltage areas (LVA), image intensity ratio (IIR) or conduction velocity (CV). You can see how many abbreviations we scientists use! It’s easy to get lost. But don’t worry, it has happened to all of us.
As an example, there is this time I was introducing myself into the description of CV and I was reading a review paper on how to calculate it. I got a call and had to stop reading. When I came back, I read CV and thought the authors were talking about their Curriculum Vitae! It doesn’t happen anymore (well, almost never at least…), but I was seriously confused for a few seconds there.
Apart from the confusion I felt then, I also remember the content of the paper from Cantwell et al. It is an interesting review and it also gets deeper in how to obtain information of the CV based on the activation data obtained from endocardial mapping. Hence, in this post I will try to explain two of the methods used to calculate CV from activation data