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Lifetimes of epicardial rotors in panoramic optical maps of fibrillating swine ventricles
- Source :
- American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology. 291:H1935-H1941
- Publication Year :
- 2006
- Publisher :
- American Physiological Society, 2006.
-
Abstract
- During ventricular fibrillation (VF), electrical activation waves are fragmented, and the heart cannot contract in synchrony. It has been proposed that VF waves emanate from stable periodic sources (often called “mother rotors”). The objective of the present study was to determine if stable rotors are consistently present on the epicardial surface of hearts comparable in size to human hearts. Using new optical mapping technology, we imaged VF from nearly the entire ventricular surface of six isolated swine hearts. Using newly developed pattern analysis algorithms, we identified and tracked VF wave fronts and phase singularities (PS; the pivot point of a reentrant wave front). We introduce the notion of a compound rotor in which the rotor's central PS can change and describe an algorithm for automatically identifying such patterns. This prevents rotor lifetimes from being inappropriately abbreviated by wave front fragmentation and collision events near the PS. We found that stable epicardial rotors were not consistently present during VF: only 1 of 17 VF episodes contained a compound rotor that lasted for the entire mapped interval of 4 s. However, shorter-lived rotors were common; 12.2 (SD 3.3) compound rotors with lifetime >200 ms were visible on the epicardium at any given instant. We conclude that epicardial mother rotors do not drive VF in this experimental model; if mother rotors do exist, they are intramural or septal. This paucity of persistent rotors suggests that individual rotors will eventually terminate by themselves and therefore that the continual formation of new rotors is critical for VF maintenance.
- Subjects :
- Male
Materials science
Swine
Physiology
Heart Ventricles
Video Recording
Article
Fluorescence
Heart Conduction System
Physiology (medical)
Optical mapping
medicine
Animals
Pericardium
Video recording
Body Surface Potential Mapping
Reentry
medicine.disease
Electrophysiology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Ventricular Fibrillation
Ventricular fibrillation
Female
Electrical conduction system of the heart
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Algorithms
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15221539 and 03636135
- Volume :
- 291
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9c95f97a8ef7088f15e9731fa98eaace