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The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias

Electrophysiological heterogeneity in action potential recordings from healthy intact hearts remains highly variable and, where present, is almost entirely abolished at fast pacing rates. Consequently, the functional importance of intrinsic action potential duration (APD) heterogeneity in healthy ve...

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Autores principales: Bishop, Martin J., Vigmond, Edward J., Plank, Gernot
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Physiological Society 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3652087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23436328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00894.2012
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author Bishop, Martin J.
Vigmond, Edward J.
Plank, Gernot
author_facet Bishop, Martin J.
Vigmond, Edward J.
Plank, Gernot
author_sort Bishop, Martin J.
collection PubMed
description Electrophysiological heterogeneity in action potential recordings from healthy intact hearts remains highly variable and, where present, is almost entirely abolished at fast pacing rates. Consequently, the functional importance of intrinsic action potential duration (APD) heterogeneity in healthy ventricles, and particularly its role during rapidly activating reentrant arrhythmias, remain poorly understood. By incorporating both transmural and apicobasal APD heterogeneity within a biventricular rabbit computational model and comparing with an equivalent homogeneous model, we directly investigated the functional importance of intrinsic APD heterogeneity under fast pacing and arrhythmogenic protocols. Although differences in APD were significantly modulated at the tissue level during pacing and further reduced as pacing frequency increased, small differences were still noticeable. Such differences were further marginally accentuated/attenuated via electrotonic effects relative to wavefront propagation directions. The remaining small levels of APD heterogeneity under the fastest pacing frequencies resulted in arrhythmia initiation via heterogeneous conduction block, in contrast to complete block in the homogeneous model. Such induction mechanisms were more evident during premature stimuli at slower paced rhythms where intrinsic heterogeneity remained to a greater degree. During sustained arrhythmias, however, intrinsic heterogeneity made little difference to overall reentrant behavior, either visually, or in terms of duration, metrics quantifying filament/phase singularity dynamics, and global electrocardiogram characteristics. These findings suggest that, despite being important during arrhythmia initiation, intrinsic electrophysiological heterogeneity plays little functional role during rapid pacing and sustained arrhythmia dynamics in the healthy ventricle and thus questions the need to incorporate such detail in computational models when simulating rapid arrhythmias.
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spelling pubmed-36520872014-05-01 The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias Bishop, Martin J. Vigmond, Edward J. Plank, Gernot Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol Integrative Cardiovascular Physiology and Pathophysiology Electrophysiological heterogeneity in action potential recordings from healthy intact hearts remains highly variable and, where present, is almost entirely abolished at fast pacing rates. Consequently, the functional importance of intrinsic action potential duration (APD) heterogeneity in healthy ventricles, and particularly its role during rapidly activating reentrant arrhythmias, remain poorly understood. By incorporating both transmural and apicobasal APD heterogeneity within a biventricular rabbit computational model and comparing with an equivalent homogeneous model, we directly investigated the functional importance of intrinsic APD heterogeneity under fast pacing and arrhythmogenic protocols. Although differences in APD were significantly modulated at the tissue level during pacing and further reduced as pacing frequency increased, small differences were still noticeable. Such differences were further marginally accentuated/attenuated via electrotonic effects relative to wavefront propagation directions. The remaining small levels of APD heterogeneity under the fastest pacing frequencies resulted in arrhythmia initiation via heterogeneous conduction block, in contrast to complete block in the homogeneous model. Such induction mechanisms were more evident during premature stimuli at slower paced rhythms where intrinsic heterogeneity remained to a greater degree. During sustained arrhythmias, however, intrinsic heterogeneity made little difference to overall reentrant behavior, either visually, or in terms of duration, metrics quantifying filament/phase singularity dynamics, and global electrocardiogram characteristics. These findings suggest that, despite being important during arrhythmia initiation, intrinsic electrophysiological heterogeneity plays little functional role during rapid pacing and sustained arrhythmia dynamics in the healthy ventricle and thus questions the need to incorporate such detail in computational models when simulating rapid arrhythmias. American Physiological Society 2013-05-01 2013-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3652087/ /pubmed/23436328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00894.2012 Text en Copyright © 2013 the American Physiological Society Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution CC-BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US) : the American Physiological Society.
spellingShingle Integrative Cardiovascular Physiology and Pathophysiology
Bishop, Martin J.
Vigmond, Edward J.
Plank, Gernot
The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias
title The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias
title_full The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias
title_fullStr The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias
title_full_unstemmed The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias
title_short The functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias
title_sort functional role of electrophysiological heterogeneity in the rabbit ventricle during rapid pacing and arrhythmias
topic Integrative Cardiovascular Physiology and Pathophysiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3652087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23436328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00894.2012
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