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A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue

Sudden cardiac death is often caused by cardiac arrhythmias. Recently, special attention has been given to a certain arrhythmogenic condition, the long-QT syndrome, which occurs as a result of genetic mutations or drug toxicity. The underlying mechanisms of arrhythmias, caused by the long-QT syndrom...

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Autores principales: Vandersickel, Nele, Kazbanov, Ivan V., Nuitermans, Anita, Weise, Louis D., Pandit, Rahul, Panfilov, Alexander V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3888406/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24427289
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084595
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author Vandersickel, Nele
Kazbanov, Ivan V.
Nuitermans, Anita
Weise, Louis D.
Pandit, Rahul
Panfilov, Alexander V.
author_facet Vandersickel, Nele
Kazbanov, Ivan V.
Nuitermans, Anita
Weise, Louis D.
Pandit, Rahul
Panfilov, Alexander V.
author_sort Vandersickel, Nele
collection PubMed
description Sudden cardiac death is often caused by cardiac arrhythmias. Recently, special attention has been given to a certain arrhythmogenic condition, the long-QT syndrome, which occurs as a result of genetic mutations or drug toxicity. The underlying mechanisms of arrhythmias, caused by the long-QT syndrome, are not fully understood. However, arrhythmias are often connected to special excitations of cardiac cells, called early afterdepolarizations (EADs), which are depolarizations during the repolarizing phase of the action potential. So far, EADs have been studied mainly in isolated cardiac cells. However, the question on how EADs at the single-cell level can result in fibrillation at the tissue level, especially in human cell models, has not been widely studied yet. In this paper, we study wave patterns that result from single-cell EAD dynamics in a mathematical model for human ventricular cardiac tissue. We induce EADs by modeling experimental conditions which have been shown to evoke EADs at a single-cell level: by an increase of L-type Ca currents and a decrease of the delayed rectifier potassium currents. We show that, at the tissue level and depending on these parameters, three types of abnormal wave patterns emerge. We classify them into two types of spiral fibrillation and one type of oscillatory dynamics. Moreover, we find that the emergent wave patterns can be driven by calcium or sodium currents and we find phase waves in the oscillatory excitation regime. From our simulations we predict that arrhythmias caused by EADs can occur during normal wave propagation and do not require tissue heterogeneities. Experimental verification of our results is possible for experiments at the cell-culture level, where EADs can be induced by an increase of the L-type calcium conductance and by the application of I[Image: see text] blockers, and the properties of the emergent patterns can be studied by optical mapping of the voltage and calcium.
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spelling pubmed-38884062014-01-14 A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue Vandersickel, Nele Kazbanov, Ivan V. Nuitermans, Anita Weise, Louis D. Pandit, Rahul Panfilov, Alexander V. PLoS One Research Article Sudden cardiac death is often caused by cardiac arrhythmias. Recently, special attention has been given to a certain arrhythmogenic condition, the long-QT syndrome, which occurs as a result of genetic mutations or drug toxicity. The underlying mechanisms of arrhythmias, caused by the long-QT syndrome, are not fully understood. However, arrhythmias are often connected to special excitations of cardiac cells, called early afterdepolarizations (EADs), which are depolarizations during the repolarizing phase of the action potential. So far, EADs have been studied mainly in isolated cardiac cells. However, the question on how EADs at the single-cell level can result in fibrillation at the tissue level, especially in human cell models, has not been widely studied yet. In this paper, we study wave patterns that result from single-cell EAD dynamics in a mathematical model for human ventricular cardiac tissue. We induce EADs by modeling experimental conditions which have been shown to evoke EADs at a single-cell level: by an increase of L-type Ca currents and a decrease of the delayed rectifier potassium currents. We show that, at the tissue level and depending on these parameters, three types of abnormal wave patterns emerge. We classify them into two types of spiral fibrillation and one type of oscillatory dynamics. Moreover, we find that the emergent wave patterns can be driven by calcium or sodium currents and we find phase waves in the oscillatory excitation regime. From our simulations we predict that arrhythmias caused by EADs can occur during normal wave propagation and do not require tissue heterogeneities. Experimental verification of our results is possible for experiments at the cell-culture level, where EADs can be induced by an increase of the L-type calcium conductance and by the application of I[Image: see text] blockers, and the properties of the emergent patterns can be studied by optical mapping of the voltage and calcium. Public Library of Science 2014-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3888406/ /pubmed/24427289 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084595 Text en © 2014 Vandersickel et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vandersickel, Nele
Kazbanov, Ivan V.
Nuitermans, Anita
Weise, Louis D.
Pandit, Rahul
Panfilov, Alexander V.
A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue
title A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue
title_full A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue
title_fullStr A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue
title_full_unstemmed A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue
title_short A Study of Early Afterdepolarizations in a Model for Human Ventricular Tissue
title_sort study of early afterdepolarizations in a model for human ventricular tissue
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3888406/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24427289
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084595
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