Ilyas K. Colombowala, MD, FACC, FHRS
Cardiac Electrophysiology · Houston, TX · colombowala.com

Lab setup

Mapping System Setup (Carto / EnSite)

Patches, references, system check, and the prep work that means we're mapping cleanly from the first catheter in.

What we set up and why

A 3D mapping system — Carto from Biosense Webster or EnSite from Abbott — gives us catheter localization in space without continuous fluoroscopy, plus the ability to build anatomy, tag points, and create activation and voltage maps. Setup is the difference between mapping a smooth, accurate chamber and chasing drift artifacts all afternoon.

Patches and references

Carto (magnetic + impedance)

  • Location pad under the patient, centered roughly at the heart
  • Patient reference patch on the back, between the scapulae
  • ECG patches for body surface ECG integration
  • Confirm the magnetic field locator is positioned correctly under the table before the patient lies down

EnSite (impedance + magnetic depending on system)

  • Six surface patches: anterior chest, back, lateral chest, lateral back, and limb patches
  • Patches placed with patient supine, arms in final position — moving arms changes the field
  • Skin must be dry; alcohol prep before patch placement helps adherence
  • Confirm patch impedance values in normal range before drape

For either system: patches go on before the sterile drape. Adding a missing patch later means breaking the field.

System boot and pre-case check

  • Power up the workstation as soon as the room turns over — software boot and patient registration take time
  • Enter patient demographics from the order, double-checked against the wristband
  • Select the case type — AF, atrial flutter, VT, SVT — this loads the right defaults
  • Connect cables: catheter inputs, reference, system interface to the recording system
  • Confirm signal acquisition: ECG visible, impedance values stable, no drift on a stationary catheter

Catheter setup

  • Plug in the mapping catheter and confirm it shows on screen before insertion
  • Confirm electrode spacing matches what the system expects (high-density vs. duo-decapolar vs. focal tip)
  • Test electrode bipoles on the bench if signals look wrong — better to swap on the table than mid-map
  • For ablation catheters, confirm impedance, temperature, and tip force readings are live

Building anatomy

Strategy varies by chamber and operator, but the principles are constant:

  • Start with the catheter that builds anatomy best (high-density multi-electrode for chambers, ICE for left-sided)
  • Sweep slowly along the wall — fast sweeps make jagged geometry
  • Save anatomy at logical checkpoints — every chamber, before transseptal, after PVI
  • Tag landmarks as we go: His, CS os, PV ostia, esophagus position

Map types we use

  • Activation maps — color-coded timing of local activation; used for re-entry circuits and focal sources
  • Voltage maps — peak-to-peak signal amplitude; scar appears as low voltage
  • Propagation / Ripple — visualizing the wavefront moving through tissue
  • CFAE / complex fractionated — historical for AF substrate, less used now
  • Force / contact maps — for RF cases, shows where good contact was achieved

Common omissions to catch on the pre-case timeout

  • Patches placed but not plugged in — system reads “no reference”
  • Patient demographics wrong on the case file
  • Old map from prior patient still loaded — happens more than we admit
  • Mapping cable not connected to the recording system, so points won’t annotate
  • Wrong catheter profile selected — measurements will be off
  • ECG reference channel not chosen — annotations will float

Safety habits

  • Save often. The system is software. Software crashes. Save anatomy after every meaningful checkpoint.
  • Don’t move patches mid-case — if a patch peels off and gets replaced, the geometry shifts and the existing map is no longer accurate. Re-register if you have to.
  • Watch impedance values during long cases — sweating, patient movement, and patch lift all change them.
  • Backup fluoroscopy — if the mapping system fails, we can finish the case on fluoro. Know that fallback exists and have the C-arm settings ready.
  • Communicate between operator and mapping tech: every point taken, every map saved, every change in catheter is called out.

Last reviewed by Dr. Colombowala on May 22, 2026.

Clinical-reference content, not medical advice. This page is written for EP staff and does not create a doctor-patient relationship. It does not replace institutional policy, current device manuals, or attending direction during a case. See the full disclaimer.

© 2026 Ilyas K. Colombowala, MD. All rights reserved. Reproduction, redistribution, or republication of this content in any form without written permission is prohibited.

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