OXFORD UNIVERSITY COMPUTING LABORATORY

Mechanistic enquiry into the effect of increased pacing rate on the upper limit of vulnerability.

Bourn, DW, Maleckar, MM, Rodríguez, B and Trayanova, NA

abstract

The goal of this study is to investigate the mechanisms responsible for the increase in the upper limit of vulnerability (ULV; highest shock strength that induces arrhythmia) following the increase in pacing rate. To accomplish this goal, the study employs a three-dimensional bidomain finite element model of a slice through the canine ventricles. The preparation was paced eight times at a basic cycle length (BCL) of either 80 or 150ms followed by delivery of shocks of various strengths and timings. Our results demonstrate that the shock strength, which induced an arrhythmia 50% of the time, increased 20% for the faster pacing compared to the slower pacing. Analysis of the mechanisms underlying the increased vulnerability revealed that delayed post-shock activations originating in the tissue depths appear as breakthrough activations on the surfaces of the preparation following an isoelectric window (IW). However, the IW duration was consistently shorter in the faster-paced preparation. Consequently, breakthrough activations appeared on the surfaces of this preparation earlier, when the tissue was less recovered, resulting in higher probability of unidirectional block and reentry. This explains why shocks of the same strength were more likely to result in arrhythmia induction when delivered to a preparation that was rapidly paced.

info

journal

Philos Transact A Math Phys Eng Sci

keywords

Action Potentials Animals Arrhythmia Biological Clocks Cardiac Pacing, Artificial Computer Simulation Heart Conduction System Heart Rate Humans Models, Cardiovascular Risk Assessment Risk Factors

number

1843

pages

1333-48

volume

364

year

2006

links

BibTeX

related pages

people

Random Image
Random Image
Random Image