Literature DB >> 16226067

Mechanisms of ischemia-induced ST-segment changes.

Robert S MacLeod1, Shibaji Shome, Jeroen Stinstra, Bonnie B Punske, Bruce Hopenfeld.   

Abstract

Many aspects of ischemia-induced changes in the electrocardiogram lack solid biophysical underpinnings although variations in ST segments form the predominant basis for diagnostic and monitoring of patients. This incomplete knowledge certainly plays a role in the poor performance of some forms of electrocardiogram-based detection and characterization of ischemia, especially when it is limited to the subendocardium. The focus of our recent studies has been to develop a comprehensive mechanistic model of the electrocardiographic effects of ischemia. The computational component of this model is based on highly realistic heart geometry with anisotropic fiber structure and allows us to assign ischemic action potentials to contiguous regions that can span a prescribed thickness of the ventricles. A separate, high-resolution model of myocardial tissue provides us with a means of setting electrical characteristics of the heart, including the status of gap junctional coupling between cells. The experimental counterpart of this model consists of dog hearts, either in situ or isolated and perfused with blood, in which we control coronary blood flow by means of a cannula and blood pump. By reducing blood flow through the cannula for various durations, we can replicate any phase of ischemia from hyper acute to early infarction. Based on the results of these models, there is emerging a mechanism of the electrocardiographic response to ischemia that depends strongly on the anisotropic conductivity of the myocardium. Ischemic injury currents flow across the boundary between healthy and ischemic tissue, but it is their interaction with local fiber orientation and the associated conductivity that generates secondary currents that determine epicardial ST-segment potentials. Results from experiments support qualitatively the findings of the simulations and underscore the role of myocardial anisotropy in electrocardiography.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16226067     DOI: 10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2005.06.095

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Electrocardiol        ISSN: 0022-0736            Impact factor:   1.438


  5 in total

1.  QTc Prolongation after Ventricular Septal Defect Repair in Infants.

Authors:  Chang Woo Han; Saet Byul Woo; Jae Young Choi; Jo Won Jung; Yong Hwan Park; Han Ki Park; Hong Ju Shin; Nam Kyun Kim
Journal:  Korean Circ J       Date:  2013-12-20       Impact factor: 3.243

2.  Transmural conduction delay and block producing a pseudo-infarction electrocardiogram during treatment of anaphylaxis.

Authors:  Matthew Olson; Jian-Ming Li; Selçuk Adabag; David G Benditt; Scott Sakaguchi
Journal:  HeartRhythm Case Rep       Date:  2022-04-06

Review 3.  Modeling cardiac ischemia.

Authors:  Blanca Rodríguez; Natalia Trayanova; Denis Noble
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 5.691

4.  Quantifying the effect of uncertainty in input parameters in a simplified bidomain model of partial thickness ischaemia.

Authors:  Barbara M Johnston; Sam Coveney; Eugene T Y Chang; Peter R Johnston; Richard H Clayton
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2017-09-20       Impact factor: 2.602

5.  PFEIFER: Preprocessing Framework for Electrograms Intermittently Fiducialized from Experimental Recordings.

Authors:  Anton Rodenhauser; Wilson W Good; Brian Zenger; Jess Tate; Kedar Aras; Brett Burton; Rob S MacLeod
Journal:  J Open Source Softw       Date:  2018
  5 in total

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