2005 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2005;
Los Angeles, CA
Session X7: Complex Spatio-Temporal Patterns in Cardiac Tissue
8:00 AM–10:24 AM,
Friday, March 25, 2005
LACC
Room: 408B
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBP
Chair: Leon Glass, McGill University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.MAR.X7.4
Abstract: X7.00004 : Experimental and computational studies on complex spiral waves in 2-D cardiac substrates
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Nenad Bursac
(Duke University)
A variety of chemical and biological nonlinear excitable media including
heart tissue can support stable, self-organized waves of activity in a form
of rotating single-arm spirals. In the heart tissue, stable single-arm
spirals can underlie highly periodic activity such as monomorphic
ventricular tachycardia (VT), while unstable spirals that continuously form
and break up are shown to underlie aperiodic and lethal heart activity,
namely fibrillation. Although fast pacing from a point in the heart is
commonly used to terminate VT, it can occasionally yield a transient or
stable acceleration of tachicardia rate and/or fibrillation. In this study
we tested the effect of rapid point pacing on sustained spiral waves in the
uniformly anisotropic cultures of cardiac myocytes. In 15/79 cultures, rapid
pacing induced a stable formation of multiple bound spiral waves (a complex
spiral) and acceleration of overall excitation rate in the tissue, as
assessed by pseudo ECG (pECG). The level of rate acceleration correlated
with the number of rotating waves. Further rapid point pacing decelerated,
terminated, or further accelerated the complex spiral activity via a change
in the number of coexisting rotating waves. The dynamic restitution analysis
revealed no alternans in action potential duration in any of the cultures.
Stable formation of complex spirals was accomplished only in the cultures
that showed relatively broad and steep impulse wavelength and conduction
velocity restitutions. A necessary condition for rate acceleration in a
medium with monotonic restitution is that the rate of rotation of a single
spiral wave is significantly lower than maximum sustainable rate of
excitation in the medium. Preliminary data in a homogeneous medium using
3-variable Fenton-Karma (FK) based model of cardiac tissue suggest that
decrease of fast inward current (excitability) can shift the spiral rate
away from the break point on the restitution curve, enabling a necessary
condition for rate acceleration.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.MAR.X7.4