Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.

We investigate the effect of mechano-electrical feedback and atrial fibrillation induced electrical remodelling (AFER) of cellular ion channel properties on the dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue. The tissue electro-mechanics are modelled using the discrete elemen...

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Main Authors: Paul Brocklehurst, Haibo Ni, Henggui Zhang, Jianqiao Ye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5433700?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fdad51a5df694f94a0208b3a030778ed2020-11-25T02:31:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01125e017660710.1371/journal.pone.0176607Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.Paul BrocklehurstHaibo NiHenggui ZhangJianqiao YeWe investigate the effect of mechano-electrical feedback and atrial fibrillation induced electrical remodelling (AFER) of cellular ion channel properties on the dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue. The tissue electro-mechanics are modelled using the discrete element method (DEM). Millions of bonded DEM particles form a network of coupled atrial cells representing 2D cardiac tissue, allowing simulations of the dynamic behaviour of electrical excitation waves and mechanical contraction in the tissue. In the tissue model, each cell is modelled by nine particles, accounting for the features of individual cellular geometry; and discrete inter-cellular spatial arrangement of cells is also considered. The electro-mechanical model of a human atrial single-cell was constructed by strongly coupling the electrophysiological model of Colman et al. to the mechanical myofilament model of Rice et al., with parameters modified based on experimental data. A stretch-activated channel was incorporated into the model to simulate the mechano-electrical feedback. In order to investigate the effect of mechano-electrical feedback on the dynamics of spiral waves, simulations of spiral waves were conducted in both the electromechanical model and the electrical-only model in normal and AFER conditions, to allow direct comparison of the results between the models. Dynamics of spiral waves were characterized by tracing their tip trajectories, stability, excitation frequencies and meandering range of tip trajectories. It was shown that the developed DEM method provides a stable and efficient model of human atrial tissue with considerations of the intrinsically discrete and anisotropic properties of the atrial tissue, which are challenges to handle in traditional continuum mechanics models. This study provides mechanistic insights into the complex behaviours of spiral waves and the genesis of atrial fibrillation by showing an important role of the mechano-electrical feedback in facilitating and promoting atrial fibrillation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5433700?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Brocklehurst
Haibo Ni
Henggui Zhang
Jianqiao Ye
spellingShingle Paul Brocklehurst
Haibo Ni
Henggui Zhang
Jianqiao Ye
Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Paul Brocklehurst
Haibo Ni
Henggui Zhang
Jianqiao Ye
author_sort Paul Brocklehurst
title Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.
title_short Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.
title_full Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.
title_fullStr Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.
title_full_unstemmed Electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue.
title_sort electro-mechanical dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2d model of human atrial tissue.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description We investigate the effect of mechano-electrical feedback and atrial fibrillation induced electrical remodelling (AFER) of cellular ion channel properties on the dynamics of spiral waves in a discrete 2D model of human atrial tissue. The tissue electro-mechanics are modelled using the discrete element method (DEM). Millions of bonded DEM particles form a network of coupled atrial cells representing 2D cardiac tissue, allowing simulations of the dynamic behaviour of electrical excitation waves and mechanical contraction in the tissue. In the tissue model, each cell is modelled by nine particles, accounting for the features of individual cellular geometry; and discrete inter-cellular spatial arrangement of cells is also considered. The electro-mechanical model of a human atrial single-cell was constructed by strongly coupling the electrophysiological model of Colman et al. to the mechanical myofilament model of Rice et al., with parameters modified based on experimental data. A stretch-activated channel was incorporated into the model to simulate the mechano-electrical feedback. In order to investigate the effect of mechano-electrical feedback on the dynamics of spiral waves, simulations of spiral waves were conducted in both the electromechanical model and the electrical-only model in normal and AFER conditions, to allow direct comparison of the results between the models. Dynamics of spiral waves were characterized by tracing their tip trajectories, stability, excitation frequencies and meandering range of tip trajectories. It was shown that the developed DEM method provides a stable and efficient model of human atrial tissue with considerations of the intrinsically discrete and anisotropic properties of the atrial tissue, which are challenges to handle in traditional continuum mechanics models. This study provides mechanistic insights into the complex behaviours of spiral waves and the genesis of atrial fibrillation by showing an important role of the mechano-electrical feedback in facilitating and promoting atrial fibrillation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5433700?pdf=render
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AT haiboni electromechanicaldynamicsofspiralwavesinadiscrete2dmodelofhumanatrialtissue
AT hengguizhang electromechanicaldynamicsofspiralwavesinadiscrete2dmodelofhumanatrialtissue
AT jianqiaoye electromechanicaldynamicsofspiralwavesinadiscrete2dmodelofhumanatrialtissue
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