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Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing

Electrical restitution (ER) is a major determinant of repolarization stability and, under fast pacing rate, it reveals memory properties of the cardiac action potential (AP), whose dynamics have never been fully elucidated, nor their ionic mechanisms. Previous studies have looked at ER mainly in ter...

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Autor principal: Zaniboni, Massimiliano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5832261/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29494628
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193416
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author Zaniboni, Massimiliano
author_facet Zaniboni, Massimiliano
author_sort Zaniboni, Massimiliano
collection PubMed
description Electrical restitution (ER) is a major determinant of repolarization stability and, under fast pacing rate, it reveals memory properties of the cardiac action potential (AP), whose dynamics have never been fully elucidated, nor their ionic mechanisms. Previous studies have looked at ER mainly in terms of changes in AP duration (APD) when the preceding diastolic interval (DI) changes and described dynamic conditions where this relationship shows hysteresis which, in turn, has been proposed as a marker of short-term AP memory and repolarization stability. By means of numerical simulations of a non-propagated human ventricular AP, we show here that measuring ER as APD versus the preceding cycle length (CL) provides additional information on repolarization dynamics which is not contained in the companion formulation. We focus particularly on fast pacing rate conditions with a beat-to-beat variable CL, where memory properties emerge from APD vs CL and not from APD vs DI and should thus be stored in APD and not in DI. We provide an ion-currents characterization of such conditions under periodic and random CL variability, and show that the memory stored in APD plays a stabilizing role on AP repolarization under pacing rate perturbations. The gating kinetics of L-type calcium current seems to be the main determinant of this safety mechanism. We also show that, at fast pacing rate and under otherwise identical pacing conditions, a periodically beat-to-beat changing CL is more effective than a random one in stabilizing repolarization. In summary, we propose a novel view of short-term AP memory, differentially stored between systole and diastole, which opens a number of methodological and theoretical implications for the understanding of arrhythmia development.
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spelling pubmed-58322612018-03-23 Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing Zaniboni, Massimiliano PLoS One Research Article Electrical restitution (ER) is a major determinant of repolarization stability and, under fast pacing rate, it reveals memory properties of the cardiac action potential (AP), whose dynamics have never been fully elucidated, nor their ionic mechanisms. Previous studies have looked at ER mainly in terms of changes in AP duration (APD) when the preceding diastolic interval (DI) changes and described dynamic conditions where this relationship shows hysteresis which, in turn, has been proposed as a marker of short-term AP memory and repolarization stability. By means of numerical simulations of a non-propagated human ventricular AP, we show here that measuring ER as APD versus the preceding cycle length (CL) provides additional information on repolarization dynamics which is not contained in the companion formulation. We focus particularly on fast pacing rate conditions with a beat-to-beat variable CL, where memory properties emerge from APD vs CL and not from APD vs DI and should thus be stored in APD and not in DI. We provide an ion-currents characterization of such conditions under periodic and random CL variability, and show that the memory stored in APD plays a stabilizing role on AP repolarization under pacing rate perturbations. The gating kinetics of L-type calcium current seems to be the main determinant of this safety mechanism. We also show that, at fast pacing rate and under otherwise identical pacing conditions, a periodically beat-to-beat changing CL is more effective than a random one in stabilizing repolarization. In summary, we propose a novel view of short-term AP memory, differentially stored between systole and diastole, which opens a number of methodological and theoretical implications for the understanding of arrhythmia development. Public Library of Science 2018-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5832261/ /pubmed/29494628 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193416 Text en © 2018 Massimiliano Zaniboni http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zaniboni, Massimiliano
Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing
title Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing
title_full Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing
title_fullStr Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing
title_full_unstemmed Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing
title_short Short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: A cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing
title_sort short-term action potential memory and electrical restitution: a cellular computational study on the stability of cardiac repolarization under dynamic pacing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5832261/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29494628
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193416
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