70 research outputs found

    In silico validation of electrocardiographic imaging to reconstruct the endocardial and epicardial repolarization pattern using the equivalent dipole layer source model

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    The solution of the inverse problem of electrocardiology allows the reconstruction of the spatial distribution of the electrical activity of the heart from the body surface electrocardiogram (electrocardiographic imaging, ECGI). ECGI using the equivalent dipole layer (EDL) model has shown to be accurate for cardiac activation times. However, validation of this method to determine repolarization times is lacking. In the present study, we determined the accuracy of the EDL model in reconstructing cardiac repolarization times, and assessed the robustness of the method under less ideal conditions (addition of noise and errors in tissue conductivity). A monodomain model was used to determine the transmembrane potentials in three different excitationrepolarization patterns (sinus beat and ventricular ectopic beats) as the gold standard. These were used to calculate the body surface ECGs using a finite element model. The resulting body surface electrograms (ECGs) were used as input for the EDLbased inverse reconstruction of repolarization times. The reconstructed repolarization times correlated well (COR > 0.85) with the gold standard, with almost no decrease in correlation after adding errors in tissue conductivity of the model or noise to the body surface ECG. Therefore, ECGI using the EDL model allows adequate reconstruction of cardiac repolarization times

    Trabeculations of the porcine and human cardiac ventricles are different in number but similar in total volume

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    An intricate meshwork of trabeculations lines the luminal side of cardiac ventricles. Compaction, a developmental process, is thought to reduce trabeculations by adding them to the neighboring compact wall which is then enlarged. When pig, a plausible cardiac donor for xenotransplantation, is compared to human, the ventricular walls appear to have fewer trabeculations. We hypothesized the trabecular volume is proportionally smaller in pig than in human. Macroscopically, we observed in 16 pig hearts that the ventricular walls harbor few but large trabeculations. Close inspection revealed a high number of tiny trabeculations, a few hundred, within the recesses of the large trabeculations. While tiny, these were still larger than embryonic trabeculations and even when considering their number, the total tally of trabeculations in pig was much fewer than in human. Volumetrics based on high-resolution MRI of additional six pig hearts compared to six human hearts, revealed the left ventricles were not significantly differently trabeculated (21.5 versus 22.8%, respectively), and the porcine right ventricles were only slightly less trabeculated (42.1 vs 49.3%, respectively). We then analyzed volumetrically 10 pig embryonic hearts from gestational day 14-35. The trabecular and compact layer always grew, as did the intertrabecular recesses, in contrast to what compaction predicts. The proportions of the trabecular and compact layers changed substantially, nonetheless, due to differences in their growth rate rather than compaction. In conclusion, processes that affect the trabecular morphology do not necessarily affect the proportion of trabecular-to-compact myocardium and they are then distinct from compaction

    Regional conduction slowing can explain inferolateral J waves and their attenuation by sodium channel blockers

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    International audienceJ waves in inferolateral leads are associated with an increased risk for idiopathic ventricular fibrillation. The mechanism behind such J waves is unknown. A similarity with Brugada syndrome (BS) exists but while administration of sodium (Na) channel blockers increases J waves in BS it attenuates inferolateral J waves. We hypothesized that regionally reduced conduction velocity in the lateral wall can explain both inferolateral J waves and their attenuation by Na-channel blockers.METHODS The effects of Na-channel block, reduced coupling, and increased transient outward current were evaluated with computer simulations using a detailed model of the human heart and torso. As far as possible findings were backed up with experiments in explanted pig hearts.RESULTS Reduced Na current in lateral but not in other regions induced inferolateral J waves. Increased transient outward current and cellular uncoupling caused only subthreshold J-point elevations. Administration of Na-channel blockers deformed and prolonged the QRS complex, masking the inferolateral J waves.CONCLUSION Regionally reduced Na current can explain inferolateral J waves. The fact that the lateral region is normally late-activated is crucial for the development of J waves and may explain the special importance of the inferolateral leads. The proposed mechanism also explains attenuation of J waves by Na-channel blockers

    Severe Bradycardia Increases the Incidence and Severity of Torsade de Pointes Arrhythmias by Augmenting Preexistent Spatial Dispersion of Repolarization in the CAVB Dog Model

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    Introduction: Torsade de pointes arrhythmias (TdP) in the chronic atrioventricular block (CAVB) dog model result from proarrhythmic factors, which trigger TdP and/or reinforce the arrhythmic substrate. This study investigated electrophysiological and arrhythmogenic consequences of severe bradycardia for TdP. Methods: Dofetilide (25 μg/kg per 5 min) was administered to eight anesthetized, idioventricular rhythm (IVR) remodeled CAVB dogs in two serial experiments: once under 60 beats per minute (bpm), right ventricular apex paced (RVA60) conditions, once under more bradycardic IVR conditions. Recordings included surface electrocardiogram and short-term variability (STV) of repolarization from endocardial unipolar electrograms. TdP inducibility (three or more episodes within 10 min after start of dofetilide) and arrhythmic activity scores (AS) were established. Mapping experiments in 10 additional dogs determined the effect of lowering rate on STV and spatial dispersion of repolarization (SDR) in baseline. Results: IVR-tested animals had longer baseline RR-interval (1,403 ± 271 ms) and repolarization intervals than RVA60 animals. Dofetilide increased STV similarly under both rhythm strategies. Nevertheless, TdP inducibility and AS were higher under IVR conditions (6/8 and 37 ± 27 vs. 1/8 and 8 ± 12 in RVA60, respectively, both p < 0.05). Mapping: Pacing from high (128 ± 10 bpm) to middle (88 ± 10 bpm) to experimental rate (61 ± 3 bpm) increased all electrophysiological parameters, including interventricular dispersion, due to steeper left ventricular restitution curves, and intraventricular SDR: maximal cubic dispersion from 60 ± 14 (high) to 69 ± 17 (middle) to 84 ± 22 ms (p < 0.05 vs. high and middle rate). Conclusion: In CAVB dogs, severe bradycardia increases the probability and severity of arrhythmic events by heterogeneously causing electrophysiological instability, which is mainly reflected in an increased spatial, and to a lesser extent temporal, dispersion of repolarization

    High-rate pacing suppresses Torsade de Pointes arrhythmias and reduces spatial dispersion of repolarization in the chronic AV-block dog model

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    Background: An electrical storm of Torsade de Pointes arrhythmias (TdP) can be reproducibly induced in the anesthetized chronic AV-block (CAVB) dog by infusion of the IKr-blocker dofetilide. Earlier studies showed that these arrhythmias 1) arise from locations with high spatial dispersion in repolarization (SDR) and 2) can be suppressed by high-rate pacing. We examined whether suppression of TdP by high-rate pacing is established through a decrease in SDR in the CAVB dog.Methods: Dofetilide (25 μg/kg in 5 min) was administered to 5 anesthetized CAVB dogs to induce TdP arrhythmias. During the experiments, animals were continuously paced from the right ventricular apex at 50 beats/minute (RVA50). Upon TdP occurrence and conversion, RVA pacing was consecutively set to 100, 80 and 60 beats/minute for 2 min, referred to as pacing blocks. To determine the additional anti-arrhythmic effects of HRP over defibrillation alone, the number of arrhythmic events and SDR at RVA100 were compared to data from three previously conducted experiments, in which dogs underwent the same experimental protocol but were paced at RVA60 upon TdP occurrence (RVA60retro). In all experiments, recordings included surface electrocardiogram and mapping by 56 intramural needles, each recording four electrograms, evenly inserted into the ventricular walls and septum. For each pacing block, the number of ectopic beats (EB), and TdP severity were scored. SDR was quantified as the average difference in repolarization time within four squared needles (SDRcubic).Results: In 4 out of 5 animals, pacing at RVA100 suppressed TdP occurrence. One dog could not be converted by defibrillation after the initial TdP. Compared to RVA50, pacing at RVA100, but not RVA80 and RVA60, significantly reduced the TdP score (78 ± 33 vs. 0 ± 0, p &lt; 0.05 and vs. 12.5 ± 25 and 25 ± 50, both p &gt; 0.05). The reduction in TdP score was reflected by a significant decrease in SDRcubic (125 ± 46 ms before TdP vs. 49 ± 18 ms during RVA100, p &lt; 0.05), and SDR was smaller than in the RVA60retro animals (101 ± 52 ms, p &lt; 0.05 vs. RVA100).Conclusion: In CAVB dogs, high-rate pacing effectively suppresses TdP, which, at least in part, results from a spatial homogenization of cardiac repolarization, as reflected by a decrease in SDR

    High-rate pacing suppresses Torsade de Pointes arrhythmias and reduces spatial dispersion of repolarization in the chronic AV-block dog model

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    Background: An electrical storm of Torsade de Pointes arrhythmias (TdP) can be reproducibly induced in the anesthetized chronic AV-block (CAVB) dog by infusion of the IKr-blocker dofetilide. Earlier studies showed that these arrhythmias 1) arise from locations with high spatial dispersion in repolarization (SDR) and 2) can be suppressed by high-rate pacing. We examined whether suppression of TdP by high-rate pacing is established through a decrease in SDR in the CAVB dog. Methods: Dofetilide (25 μg/kg in 5 min) was administered to 5 anesthetized CAVB dogs to induce TdP arrhythmias. During the experiments, animals were continuously paced from the right ventricular apex at 50 beats/minute (RVA50). Upon TdP occurrence and conversion, RVA pacing was consecutively set to 100, 80 and 60 beats/minute for 2 min, referred to as pacing blocks. To determine the additional anti-arrhythmic effects of HRP over defibrillation alone, the number of arrhythmic events and SDR at RVA100 were compared to data from three previously conducted experiments, in which dogs underwent the same experimental protocol but were paced at RVA60 upon TdP occurrence (RVA60retro). In all experiments, recordings included surface electrocardiogram and mapping by 56 intramural needles, each recording four electrograms, evenly inserted into the ventricular walls and septum. For each pacing block, the number of ectopic beats (EB), and TdP severity were scored. SDR was quantified as the average difference in repolarization time within four squared needles (SDRcubic). Results: In 4 out of 5 animals, pacing at RVA100 suppressed TdP occurrence. One dog could not be converted by defibrillation after the initial TdP. Compared to RVA50, pacing at RVA100, but not RVA80 and RVA60, significantly reduced the TdP score (78 ± 33 vs. 0 ± 0, p 0.05). The reduction in TdP score was reflected by a significant decrease in SDRcubic (125 ± 46 ms before TdP vs. 49 ± 18 ms during RVA100, p < 0.05), and SDR was smaller than in the RVA60retro animals (101 ± 52 ms, p < 0.05 vs. RVA100). Conclusion: In CAVB dogs, high-rate pacing effectively suppresses TdP, which, at least in part, results from a spatial homogenization of cardiac repolarization, as reflected by a decrease in SDR

    Recombinant human collagen-based microspheres mitigate cardiac conduction slowing induced by adipose tissue-derived stromal cells

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    Background Stem cell therapy to improve cardiac function after myocardial infarction is hampered by poor cell retention, while it may also increase the risk of arrhythmias by providing an arrhythmogenic substrate. We previously showed that porcine adipose tissue-derived-stromal cells (pASC) induce conduction slowing through paracrine actions, whereas rat ASC (rASC) and human ASC (hASC) induce conduction slowing by direct coupling. We postulate that biomaterial microspheres mitigate the conduction slowing influence of pASC by interacting with paracrine signaling. Aim To investigate the modulation of ASC-loaded recombinant human collagen-based microspheres, on the electrophysiological behavior of neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVM). Method Unipolar extracellular electrograms, derived from microelectrode arrays (8x8 electrodes) containing NRVM, co-cultured with ASC or ASC loaded microspheres, were used to determine conduction velocity (CV) and conduction heterogeneity. Conditioned medium (Cme) of (co)cultures was used to assess paracrine mechanisms. Results Microspheres did not affect CV in control (NRVM) monolayers. In co-cultures of NRVM and rASC, hASC or pASC, CV was lower than in controls (14.4+/-1.0, 13.0+/-0.6 and 9.0+/-1.0 vs. 19.5+/-0.5 cm/s respectively, p Conclusion The application of recombinant human collagen-based microspheres mitigates indirect paracrine conduction slowing through interference with a secondary autocrine myocardial factor
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