Literature DB >> 31206661

How are the cardiomyocytes aggregated together within the walls of the left ventricular cone?

Robert H Anderson1, Peter F Niederer2, Damian Sanchez-Quintana3, Robert S Stephenson4,5, Peter Agger5.   

Abstract

The manner of packing together of the cardiomyocytes within the walls of the cardiac ventricles has now been investigated for over half a millennium. In 1669, Lower dissected the ventricular mass, likening the arrangement to skeletal musculature, in the form of a myocardial band extending between the right and left atrioventricular junctions. Pettigrew subsequently showed obvious helical arrangements to be evident within the ventricular walls, but emphasised that the cardiomyocytes were attached to each other, and could not justifiably be compared with skeletal cardiomyocytes. Torrent-Guasp then reactivated the notion that the ventricular mass was formed of a solitary band. Unlike Lower, he dissected the band as extending between the pulmonary to the aortic roots. Multiple investigations conducted using gross dissection and histology, and more recently diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomographic analysis, have shown an absence of any anatomical boundaries within the walls that might permit the mass uniformly to be dissected so as to reveal the band. A response to a recent letter to the Journal, nonetheless, claimed that the dissections had been validated by clinicians interpreting the findings so as to provide an explanation for ventricular cardiodynamics, arguing that the findings provided a suitable anatomical model for this purpose. Anatomical models, however, are of no value unless they are anatomically correct. In this review, therefore, we summarise the evidence showing that the cardiomyocytes making up the ventricular walls, rather than forming a ventricular myocardial band, are instead aggregated together to form a three-dimensional myocardial mesh.
© 2019 Anatomical Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aggregated cardiomyocytes; fibrous matrix; helical heart; ventricular myocardial band

Year:  2019        PMID: 31206661     DOI: 10.1111/joa.13027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anat        ISSN: 0021-8782            Impact factor:   2.610


  3 in total

Review 1.  Myocardial mesostructure and mesofunction.

Authors:  Alexander J Wilson; Gregory B Sands; Ian J LeGrice; Alistair A Young; Daniel B Ennis
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2022-06-03       Impact factor: 5.125

2.  Journal of Anatomy January 2020.

Authors:  Julia Clarke; Thomas Gillingwater; Anthony Graham; Stefan Milz
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2020-01       Impact factor: 2.610

Review 3.  Assessing Myocardial Architecture: The Challenges and Controversies.

Authors:  Peter Agger; Robert S Stephenson
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Dev Dis       Date:  2020-10-29
  3 in total

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