343 research outputs found
Measurement bias in activation-recovery intervals from unipolar electrograms
The activation-recovery interval (ARI) calculated from unipolar electrograms is regularly used as a convenient surrogate measure of local cardiac action potential durations (APD). This method enables important research bridging between computational studies and in vitro and in vivo human studies. The Wyatt method is well established as a theoretically sound method for calculating ARIs; however, some studies have observed that it is prone to a bias error in measurement when applied to positive T waves. This article demonstrates that recent theoretical and computational studies supporting the use of the Wyatt method are likely to have underestimated the extent of this bias in many practical experimental recording scenarios. This work addresses these situations and explains the measurement bias by adapting existing theoretical expressions of the electrogram to represent practical experimental recording configurations. A new analytic expression for the electrogram's local component is derived, which identifies the source of measurement bias for positive T waves. A computer implementation of the new analytic model confirms our hypothesis that the bias is systematically dependent on the electrode configuration. These results provide an aid to electrogram interpretation in general, and this work's outcomes are used to make recommendations on how to minimize measurement error
Indeterminacy of Spatiotemporal Cardiac Alternans
Cardiac alternans, a beat-to-beat alternation in action potential duration
(at the cellular level) or in ECG morphology (at the whole heart level), is a
marker of ventricular fibrillation, a fatal heart rhythm that kills hundreds of
thousands of people in the US each year. Investigating cardiac alternans may
lead to a better understanding of the mechanisms of cardiac arrhythmias and
eventually better algorithms for the prediction and prevention of such dreadful
diseases. In paced cardiac tissue, alternans develops under increasingly
shorter pacing period. Existing experimental and theoretical studies adopt the
assumption that alternans in homogeneous cardiac tissue is exclusively
determined by the pacing period. In contrast, we find that, when calcium-driven
alternans develops in cardiac fibers, it may take different spatiotemporal
patterns depending on the pacing history. Because there coexist multiple
alternans solutions for a given pacing period, the alternans pattern on a fiber
becomes unpredictable. Using numerical simulation and theoretical analysis, we
show that the coexistence of multiple alternans patterns is induced by the
interaction between electrotonic coupling and an instability in calcium
cycling.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
A generalized theory for current-source density analysis in brain tissue
The current-source density (CSD) analysis is a widely used method in brain
electrophysiology, but this method rests on a series of assumptions, namely
that the surrounding extracellular medium is resistive and uniform, and in some
versions of the theory, that the current sources are exclusively made by
dipoles. Because of these assumptions, this standard model does not correctly
describe the contributions of monopolar sources or of non-resistive aspects of
the extracellular medium. We propose here a general framework to model electric
fields and potentials resulting from current source densities, without relying
on the above assumptions. We develop a mean-field formalism which is a
generalization of the standard model, and which can directly incorporate
non-resistive (non-ohmic) properties of the extracellular medium, such as ionic
diffusion effects. This formalism recovers the classic results of the standard
model such as the CSD analysis, but in addition, we provide expressions to
generalize the CSD approach to situations with non-resistive media and
arbitrarily complex multipolar configurations of current sources. We found that
the power spectrum of the signal contains the signature of the nature of
current sources and extracellular medium, which provides a direct way to
estimate those properties from experimental data, and in particular, estimate
the possible contribution of electric monopoles.Comment: Physical Review E, in press, 201
Dynamics of lattice spins as a model of arrhythmia
We consider evolution of initial disturbances in spatially extended systems
with autonomous rhythmic activity, such as the heart. We consider the case when
the activity is stable with respect to very smooth (changing little across the
medium) disturbances and construct lattice models for description of
not-so-smooth disturbances, in particular, topological defects; these models
are modifications of the diffusive XY model. We find that when the activity on
each lattice site is very rigid in maintaining its form, the topological
defects - vortices or spirals - nucleate a transition to a disordered,
turbulent state.Comment: 17 pages, revtex, 3 figure
Superconducting String Texture
We present a detailed analytical and numerical study of a novel type of
static, superconducting, classically stable string texture in a renormalizable
topologically trivial massive U(1) gauge model with one charged and one neutral
scalar. An upper bound on the mass of the charged scalar as well as on the
current that the string can carry are established. A preliminary unsuccesful
search for stable solutions corresponding to large superconducting loops is
also reported.Comment: RevTex, 14 pages, 8 figure
Extracellular electrical signals in a neuron-surface junction: model of heterogeneous membrane conductivity
Signals recorded from neurons with extracellular planar sensors have a wide
range of waveforms and amplitudes. This variety is a result of different
physical conditions affecting the ion currents through a cellular membrane. The
transmembrane currents are often considered by macroscopic membrane models as
essentially a homogeneous process. However, this assumption is doubtful, since
ions move through ion channels, which are scattered within the membrane.
Accounting for this fact, the present work proposes a theoretical model of
heterogeneous membrane conductivity. The model is based on the hypothesis that
both potential and charge are distributed inhomogeneously on the membrane
surface, concentrated near channel pores, as the direct consequence of the
inhomogeneous transmembrane current. A system of continuity equations having
non-stationary and quasi-stationary forms expresses this fact mathematically.
The present work performs mathematical analysis of the proposed equations,
following by the synthesis of the equivalent electric element of a
heterogeneous membrane current. This element is further used to construct a
model of the cell-surface electric junction in a form of the equivalent
electrical circuit. After that a study of how the heterogeneous membrane
conductivity affects parameters of the extracellular electrical signal is
performed. As the result it was found that variation of the passive
characteristics of the cell-surface junction, conductivity of the cleft and the
cleft height, could lead to different shapes of the extracellular signals
Closed-form analytical expressions for the potential fields generated by triangular monolayers with linearly distributed source strength
The solution of the mixed boundary value problem of potential theory involves the computation of the potential field generated by monolayer and double layer source distributions on surfaces at which boundary conditions are known. Closed-form analytical expressions have been described in the literature for the potential field generated by double layers having a linearly distributed strength over triangular source elements. This contribution presents the corresponding expression for the linearly distributed monolayer strength. The solution is shown to be valid for all observation points in space, including those on the interior, edges and vertices of the source triangle
Advances in surface EMG signal simulation with analytical and numerical descriptions of the volume conductor
Surface electromyographic (EMG) signal modeling is important for signal interpretation, testing of processing algorithms, detection system design, and didactic purposes. Various surface EMG signal models have been proposed in the literature. In this study we focus on 1) the proposal of a method for modeling surface EMG signals by either analytical or numerical descriptions of the volume conductor for space-invariant systems, and 2) the development of advanced models of the volume conductor by numerical approaches, accurately describing not only the volume conductor geometry, as mainly done in the past, but also the conductivity tensor of the muscle tissue. For volume conductors that are space-invariant in the direction of source propagation, the surface potentials generated by any source can be computed by one-dimensional convolutions, once the volume conductor transfer function is derived (analytically or numerically). Conversely, more complex volume conductors require a complete numerical approach. In a numerical approach, the conductivity tensor of the muscle tissue should be matched with the fiber orientation. In some cases (e.g., multi-pinnate muscles) accurate description of the conductivity tensor may be very complex. A method for relating the conductivity tensor of the muscle tissue, to be used in a numerical approach, to the curve describing the muscle fibers is presented and applied to representatively investigate a bi-pinnate muscle with rectilinear and curvilinear fibers. The study thus propose an approach for surface EMG signal simulation in space invariant systems as well as new models of the volume conductor using numerical methods
Towards local electromechanical probing of cellular and biomolecular systems in a liquid environment
Electromechanical coupling is ubiquitous in biological systems with examples
ranging from simple piezoelectricity in calcified and connective tissues to
voltage-gated ion channels, energy storage in mitochondria, and
electromechanical activity in cardiac myocytes and outer hair cell stereocilia.
Piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) has originally emerged as a technique to
study electromechanical phenomena in ferroelectric materials, and in recent
years, has been employed to study a broad range of non-ferroelectric polar
materials, including piezoelectric biomaterials. At the same time, the
technique has been extended from ambient to liquid imaging on model
ferroelectric systems. Here, we present results on local electromechanical
probing of several model cellular and biomolecular systems, including insulin
and lysozyme amyloid fibrils, breast adenocarcinoma cells, and
bacteriorhodopsin in a liquid environment. The specific features of SPM
operation in liquid are delineated and bottlenecks on the route towards
nanometer-resolution electromechanical imaging of biological systems are
identified.Comment: 37 pages (including refs), 8 figure
Can ultrasound be used to stimulate nerve tissue?
BACKGROUND: The stimulation of nerve or cortical tissue by magnetic induction is a relatively new tool for the non-invasive study of the brain and nervous system. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), for example, has been used for the functional mapping of the motor cortex and may have potential for treating a variety of brain disorders. METHODS AND RESULTS: A new method of stimulating active tissue is proposed by propagating ultrasound in the presence of a magnetic field. Since tissue is conductive, particle motion created by an ultrasonic wave will induce an electric current density generated by Lorentz forces. An analytical derivation is given for the electric field distribution induced by a collimated ultrasonic beam. An example shows that peak electric fields of up to 8 V/m appear to be achievable at the upper range of diagnostic intensities. This field strength is about an order of magnitude lower than fields typically associated with TMS; however, the electric field gradients induced by ultrasound can be quite high (about 60 kV/m(2 )at 4 MHz), which theoretically play a more important role in activation than the field magnitude. The latter value is comparable to TMS-induced gradients. CONCLUSION: The proposed method could be used to locally stimulate active tissue by inducing an electric field in regions where the ultrasound is focused. Potential advantages of this method compared to TMS is that stimulation of cortical tissue could be highly localized as well as achieved at greater depths in the brain than is currently possible with TMS
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