Literature DB >> 9187417

Anatomical architecture and electrical activity of the heart.

B Taccardi1, R L Lux, P R Ershler, R MacLeod, T J Dustman, N Ingebrigtsen.   

Abstract

In most early studies of cardiac electrophysiology, the correlation between propagation of excitation and the architecture of cardiac fibers was not addressed. More recently, it has become apparent that the spread of excitation, the sequence of recovery, the associated time-varying potential distributions and the intra- and extracardiac electrocardiograms are strongly affected by the complex orientation of myocardial fibers. This article is a review of older and very recent, partly unpublished, mathematical simulations and experimental findings that document the relationships between cardiac electrophysiology and fiber structure. Important anatomical factors that affect propagation and recovery are: the elongated shape of myocardial fibers which is the basis for electrical anisotropy; the epi-endocardial rotation of fiber direction in the ventricular walls; the epi-endocardial obliqueness of the fibers ("imbrication angle"), and the conduction system. Due to the complex architecture of the fibers, many different pathways are available to an excitation wavefront as it spreads from a pacing site: the straight line; the multiple, bent pathways resulting from the epi-endocardial rotation of fiber direction; the coiling intramural pathways associated with the "imbrication" angles (Streeter) and the pathways involving the Purkinje network. Only in a few cases is the straight line the fastest pathway. The shape of an excitation wavefront at a given time instant results from the competition between all possible pathways. To compute the potential distributions and ECG waveforms generated by a spreading excitation wave we must know the successive shapes and positions of the wavefront, the architecture of the fibers through which it propagates and the spatial distribution of their anisotropic electrical properties.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9187417

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Cardiol        ISSN: 0001-5385            Impact factor:   1.718


  5 in total

1.  Patient-specific generation of the Purkinje network driven by clinical measurements of a normal propagation.

Authors:  Christian Vergara; Simone Palamara; Domenico Catanzariti; Fabio Nobile; Elena Faggiano; Cesarino Pangrazzi; Maurizio Centonze; Massimiliano Maines; Alfio Quarteroni; Giuseppe Vergara
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2014-08-24       Impact factor: 2.602

2.  The left ventricle of the ungulate heart: morphofunctional characteristics and muscle fiber orientation.

Authors:  M P Roshchevsky; E V Bartusevich; A S Gulyaeva; I M Roshchevskaya
Journal:  Dokl Biol Sci       Date:  2011-05-12

3.  Ventricular geometry, strain, and rotational mechanics in pulmonary hypertension.

Authors:  Sarinya Puwanant; Margaret Park; Zoran B Popović; W H Wilson Tang; Samar Farha; Deepa George; Jacqueline Sharp; Jirapa Puntawangkoon; James E Loyd; Serpil C Erzurum; James D Thomas
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2010-01-04       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Nondestructive optical determination of fiber organization in intact myocardial wall.

Authors:  Rebecca M Smith; Arvydas Matiukas; Christian W Zemlin; Arkady M Pertsov
Journal:  Microsc Res Tech       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 2.769

5.  Adaptive anisotropic gaussian filtering to reduce acquisition time in cardiac diffusion tensor imaging.

Authors:  Ria Mazumder; Bradley D Clymer; Xiaokui Mo; Richard D White; Arunark Kolipaka
Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2016-02-02       Impact factor: 2.357

  5 in total

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