Dynamics of cardiac re-entry in micro-CT and serial histological sections based models of mammalian hearts



Ramlugun, Girish S, Thomas, Belvin, Biktashev, Vadim N, Fraser, Diane P, LeGrice, Ian J, Smaill, Bruce H, Zhao, Jichao and Biktasheva, Irina V ORCID: 0000-0003-2906-2881
(2018) Dynamics of cardiac re-entry in micro-CT and serial histological sections based models of mammalian hearts.

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Abstract

Cardiac re-entry regime of self-organised abnormal synchronisation underlie dangerous arrhythmias and fatal fibrillation. Recent advances in the theory of dissipative vortices, experimental studies, and anatomically realistic computer simulations, elucidated the role of cardiac re-entry interaction with fine anatomical features in the heart, and anatomy induced drift. The fact that anatomy and structural anisotropy of the heart is consistent within a species suggested its possible functional effect on spontaneous drift of cardiac re-entry. A comparative study of the anatomy induced drift could be used in order to predict evolution of atrial arrhythmia, and improve low-voltage defibrillation protocols and ablation strategies. Here, in micro-CT based model of rat pulmonary vein wall, and in sheep atria models based on high resolution serial histological sections, we demonstrate effects of heart geometry and anisotropy on cardiac re-entry anatomy induced drift, its pinning to fluctuations of thickness in the layer. The data sets of sheep atria and rat pulmonary vein wall are incorporated into the BeatBox High Performance Computing simulation environment. Re-entry is initiated at prescribed locations in the spatially homogeneous mono-domain models of cardiac tissue. Excitation is described by FitzHugh-Nagumo kinetics. In the in-silico models, isotropic and anisotropic conduction show specific anatomy effects and the interplay between anatomy and anisotropy of the heart. The main objectives are to demonstrate the functional role of the species hearts geometry and anisotropy on cardiac re-entry anatomy induced drift. In case of the rat pulmonary vein wall with ~90 degree transmural fibre rotation, it is shown that the joint effect of the PV wall geometry and anisotropy turns a plane excitation wave into a re-entry pinned to a small fluctuation of thickness in the wall.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: manuscript submitted to Frontiers in Physiology
Uncontrolled Keywords: q-bio.TO, q-bio.TO
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 26 Sep 2018 08:15
Last Modified: 19 Jan 2023 01:16
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URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3026741