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Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm

Physiological variability manifests itself via differences in physiological function between individuals of the same species, and has crucial implications in disease progression and treatment. Despite its importance, physiological variability has traditionally been ignored in experimental and comput...

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Autores principales: Muszkiewicz, Anna, Britton, Oliver J., Gemmell, Philip, Passini, Elisa, Sánchez, Carlos, Zhou, Xin, Carusi, Annamaria, Quinn, T. Alexander, Burrage, Kevin, Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso, Rodriguez, Blanca
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pergamon Press 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4821179/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26701222
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2015.12.002
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author Muszkiewicz, Anna
Britton, Oliver J.
Gemmell, Philip
Passini, Elisa
Sánchez, Carlos
Zhou, Xin
Carusi, Annamaria
Quinn, T. Alexander
Burrage, Kevin
Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso
Rodriguez, Blanca
author_facet Muszkiewicz, Anna
Britton, Oliver J.
Gemmell, Philip
Passini, Elisa
Sánchez, Carlos
Zhou, Xin
Carusi, Annamaria
Quinn, T. Alexander
Burrage, Kevin
Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso
Rodriguez, Blanca
author_sort Muszkiewicz, Anna
collection PubMed
description Physiological variability manifests itself via differences in physiological function between individuals of the same species, and has crucial implications in disease progression and treatment. Despite its importance, physiological variability has traditionally been ignored in experimental and computational investigations due to averaging over samples from multiple individuals. Recently, modelling frameworks have been devised for studying mechanisms underlying physiological variability in cardiac electrophysiology and pro-arrhythmic risk under a variety of conditions and for several animal species as well as human. One such methodology exploits populations of cardiac cell models constrained with experimental data, or experimentally-calibrated populations of models. In this review, we outline the considerations behind constructing an experimentally-calibrated population of models and review the studies that have employed this approach to investigate variability in cardiac electrophysiology in physiological and pathological conditions, as well as under drug action. We also describe the methodology and compare it with alternative approaches for studying variability in cardiac electrophysiology, including cell-specific modelling approaches, sensitivity-analysis based methods, and populations-of-models frameworks that do not consider the experimental calibration step. We conclude with an outlook for the future, predicting the potential of new methodologies for patient-specific modelling extending beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm.
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spelling pubmed-48211792016-04-15 Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm Muszkiewicz, Anna Britton, Oliver J. Gemmell, Philip Passini, Elisa Sánchez, Carlos Zhou, Xin Carusi, Annamaria Quinn, T. Alexander Burrage, Kevin Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso Rodriguez, Blanca Prog Biophys Mol Biol Article Physiological variability manifests itself via differences in physiological function between individuals of the same species, and has crucial implications in disease progression and treatment. Despite its importance, physiological variability has traditionally been ignored in experimental and computational investigations due to averaging over samples from multiple individuals. Recently, modelling frameworks have been devised for studying mechanisms underlying physiological variability in cardiac electrophysiology and pro-arrhythmic risk under a variety of conditions and for several animal species as well as human. One such methodology exploits populations of cardiac cell models constrained with experimental data, or experimentally-calibrated populations of models. In this review, we outline the considerations behind constructing an experimentally-calibrated population of models and review the studies that have employed this approach to investigate variability in cardiac electrophysiology in physiological and pathological conditions, as well as under drug action. We also describe the methodology and compare it with alternative approaches for studying variability in cardiac electrophysiology, including cell-specific modelling approaches, sensitivity-analysis based methods, and populations-of-models frameworks that do not consider the experimental calibration step. We conclude with an outlook for the future, predicting the potential of new methodologies for patient-specific modelling extending beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm. Pergamon Press 2016-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4821179/ /pubmed/26701222 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2015.12.002 Text en © 2015 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Muszkiewicz, Anna
Britton, Oliver J.
Gemmell, Philip
Passini, Elisa
Sánchez, Carlos
Zhou, Xin
Carusi, Annamaria
Quinn, T. Alexander
Burrage, Kevin
Bueno-Orovio, Alfonso
Rodriguez, Blanca
Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm
title Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm
title_full Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm
title_fullStr Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm
title_full_unstemmed Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm
title_short Variability in cardiac electrophysiology: Using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm
title_sort variability in cardiac electrophysiology: using experimentally-calibrated populations of models to move beyond the single virtual physiological human paradigm
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4821179/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26701222
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2015.12.002
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