Medizinische Universität Graz - Research portal

Logo MUG Resarch Portal

Selected Publication:

SHR Neuro Cancer Cardio Lipid Metab Microb

Plank, G; Leon, LJ; Kimber, S; Vigmond, EJ.
Defibrillation depends on conductivity fluctuations and the degree of disorganization in reentry patterns.
J CARDIOVASC ELECTROPHYSIOL. 2005; 16(2): 205-216. Doi: 10.1046/j.1540-8167.2005.40140.x
Web of Science PubMed FullText FullText_MUG

 

Leading authors Med Uni Graz
Plank Gernot
Altmetrics:

Dimensions Citations:

Plum Analytics:

Scite (citation analytics):

Abstract:
Defibrillation depends on conductivity and disorganization. INTRODUCTION: Cardiac fibrillation is the deterioration of the heart's normally well-organized activity into one or more meandering spiral waves, which subsequently break up into many meandering wave fronts. Delivery of an electric shock (defibrillation) is the only effective way of restoring the normal rhythm. This study focuses on examining whether higher degrees of disorganization requires higher shock strengths to defibrillate and whether microscopic conductivity fluctuations favor shock success. METHODS AND RESULTS: We developed a three-dimensional computer bidomain model of a block of cardiac tissue with straight fibers immersed in a conductive bath. The membrane behavior was described by the Courtemanche human atrial action potential model incorporating electroporation and an acetylcholine- (ACh) dependent potassium current. Intracellular conductivities were varied stochastically around nominal values with variations of up to 50%. A single rotor reentry was initiated and, by adjusting the spatial ACh variation, the level of organization could be controlled. The single rotor could be stabilized or spiral wave breakup could be provoked leading to fibrillatory-like activity. For each level of organization, multiple shock timings and strengths were applied to compute the probability of shock success as a function of shock strength. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the level of the small-scale conductivity fluctuations is a very important factor in defibrillation. A higher variation significantly lowers the required shock strength. Further, we demonstrated that success also heavily depends on the level of organization of the fibrillatory episode. In general, higher levels of disorganization require higher shock strengths to defibrillate.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Acetylcholine - physiology
Action Potentials - physiology
Computer Simulation - physiology
Electric Conductivity - physiology
Electric Countershock - physiology
Electroporation - physiology
Heart Block - physiopathology
Potassium - physiology

Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
defibrillation
microscopic heterogeneities
disorganization
virtual electrode polarization
bidomain model
© Med Uni GrazImprint