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The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles

Fine-scale anatomical structures in the heart may play an important role in sustaining cardiac arrhythmias. However, the extent of this role and how it may differ between species are not fully understood. In this study we used computational modelling to assess the impact of anatomy upon arrhythmia m...

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Autores principales: Bishop, Martin J, Plank, Gernot
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Science Inc 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3467803/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22753546
http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2012.229062
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author Bishop, Martin J
Plank, Gernot
author_facet Bishop, Martin J
Plank, Gernot
author_sort Bishop, Martin J
collection PubMed
description Fine-scale anatomical structures in the heart may play an important role in sustaining cardiac arrhythmias. However, the extent of this role and how it may differ between species are not fully understood. In this study we used computational modelling to assess the impact of anatomy upon arrhythmia maintenance in the rabbit ventricles. Specifically, we quantified the dynamics of excitation wavefronts during episodes of simulated tachyarrhythmias and fibrillatory arrhythmias, defined as being respectively characterised by relatively low and high spatio-temporal disorganisation. Two computational models were used: a highly anatomically detailed MR-derived rabbit ventricular model (representing vasculature, endocardial structures) and a simplified equivalent model, constructed from the same MR-data but lacking such fine-scale anatomical features. During tachyarrhythmias, anatomically complex and simplified models showed very similar dynamics; however, during fibrillatory arrhythmias, as activation wavelength decreased, the presence of fine-scale anatomical details appeared to marginally increase disorganisation of wavefronts during arrhythmias in the complex model. Although a small amount of clustering of reentrant rotor centres (filaments) around endocardial structures was witnessed in follow-up analysis (which slightly increased during fibrillation as rotor size decreased), this was significantly less than previously reported in large animals. Importantly, no anchoring of reentrant rotors was visibly identifiable in arrhythmia movies. These differences between tachy- and fibrillatory arrhythmias suggest that the relative size of reentrant rotors with respect to anatomical obstacles governs the influence of fine-scale anatomy in the maintenance of ventricular arrhythmias in the rabbit. In conclusion, our simulations suggest that fine-scale anatomical features play little apparent role in the maintenance of tachyarrhythmias in the rabbit ventricles and, contrary to experimental reports in larger animals, appear to play only a minor role in the maintenance of fibrillatory arrhythmias. These findings also have important implications in optimising the level of detail required in anatomical computational meshes frequently used in arrhythmia investigations.
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spelling pubmed-34678032012-10-12 The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles Bishop, Martin J Plank, Gernot J Physiol Computational Physiology and Modelling Fine-scale anatomical structures in the heart may play an important role in sustaining cardiac arrhythmias. However, the extent of this role and how it may differ between species are not fully understood. In this study we used computational modelling to assess the impact of anatomy upon arrhythmia maintenance in the rabbit ventricles. Specifically, we quantified the dynamics of excitation wavefronts during episodes of simulated tachyarrhythmias and fibrillatory arrhythmias, defined as being respectively characterised by relatively low and high spatio-temporal disorganisation. Two computational models were used: a highly anatomically detailed MR-derived rabbit ventricular model (representing vasculature, endocardial structures) and a simplified equivalent model, constructed from the same MR-data but lacking such fine-scale anatomical features. During tachyarrhythmias, anatomically complex and simplified models showed very similar dynamics; however, during fibrillatory arrhythmias, as activation wavelength decreased, the presence of fine-scale anatomical details appeared to marginally increase disorganisation of wavefronts during arrhythmias in the complex model. Although a small amount of clustering of reentrant rotor centres (filaments) around endocardial structures was witnessed in follow-up analysis (which slightly increased during fibrillation as rotor size decreased), this was significantly less than previously reported in large animals. Importantly, no anchoring of reentrant rotors was visibly identifiable in arrhythmia movies. These differences between tachy- and fibrillatory arrhythmias suggest that the relative size of reentrant rotors with respect to anatomical obstacles governs the influence of fine-scale anatomy in the maintenance of ventricular arrhythmias in the rabbit. In conclusion, our simulations suggest that fine-scale anatomical features play little apparent role in the maintenance of tachyarrhythmias in the rabbit ventricles and, contrary to experimental reports in larger animals, appear to play only a minor role in the maintenance of fibrillatory arrhythmias. These findings also have important implications in optimising the level of detail required in anatomical computational meshes frequently used in arrhythmia investigations. Blackwell Science Inc 2012-09-15 2012-07-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3467803/ /pubmed/22753546 http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2012.229062 Text en © 2012 The Authors. The Journal of Physiology © 2012 The Physiological Society
spellingShingle Computational Physiology and Modelling
Bishop, Martin J
Plank, Gernot
The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles
title The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles
title_full The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles
title_fullStr The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles
title_full_unstemmed The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles
title_short The role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles
title_sort role of fine-scale anatomical structure in the dynamics of reentry in computational models of the rabbit ventricles
topic Computational Physiology and Modelling
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3467803/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22753546
http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2012.229062
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