The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium

The temporal nature of ectopic activity is important to elucidating the mechanisms that can lead to arrhythmogenesis. However, challenges remain in distinguishing between ectopic and non-ectopic beats. A new methodology was developed and validated to distinguish between beat types. Rapid pacing w...

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Main Author: Greer-Short, Amara D.
Other Authors: Biomedical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70880
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-708802021-08-21T05:30:43Z The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium Greer-Short, Amara D. Biomedical Engineering Poelzing, Steven Gabler, Hampton Clay Huckle, William R. Almahameed, Soufian Gourdie, Robert G. ectopic arrhythmogenesis electrophysiology tetrodotoxin acetylcholine isoproterenol The temporal nature of ectopic activity is important to elucidating the mechanisms that can lead to arrhythmogenesis. However, challenges remain in distinguishing between ectopic and non-ectopic beats. A new methodology was developed and validated to distinguish between beat types. Rapid pacing was used to induce both ectopic and non-ectopic beats. Using an electrocardiogram, the post-pacing recovery beat cycle length (RCL) and QRS were normalized to pre-paced R-R and QRS intervals and analyzed using a K-means clustering algorithm. Control hearts only produced beats with RCL ratios that increased with rapid pacing, suggestive of non-ectopic activity. Hypercalcemia and digoxin both produced significantly earlier beats with wider QRS durations, suggestive of ectopic activity. Increasing pacing further shortened RCL during digoxin + hypothermia, a mechanistic identifier of ectopic activity. When tested against a previously validated analysis, our algorithm performed well. Therefore, this electrocardiogram based algorithm distinguishes between ectopic and non-ectopic beats. In a prospective study, tetrodotoxin increased RCL ratio without changing the QRS duration of excited beats, suggesting neuronal sodium channels play an important role in ectopic beat timing. The next goal was to create a consistent model of ectopic activity. Both sympathetic and parasympathetic stimulation independently potentiate arrhythmogenesis, and we investigated the effects of independent and simultaneous stimulation on the temporal nature of arrhythmogenesis. Isoproterenol (ISO), a sympathetic agonist, transiently produced ectopic activity and increased heart rate. Acetylcholine (ACh), a parasympathetic agonist, did not significantly produce ectopic activity but did slow heart rate. ACh added after ISO also transiently produced ectopic activity, while heart rate remained slowed. Importantly, ISO following ACh persistently increased ectopic activity and heart rate. Therefore, ISO following ACh is an ideal model for creating sustained ectopic activity. Mature animals exhibited sustained arrhythmogenesis while young animals did not. When ACh was removed and then followed by ISO, ectopic activity and heart rate transiently increased, similar to ISO alone. This suggests that maintained ACh perfusion can sustain ISO sensitivity, in contrast to ISO perfusion alone. The data in this dissertation provide an insight into the mechanisms that affect the ectopic beat timing and arrhythmia propensity. Ph. D. 2016-04-30T08:00:20Z 2016-04-30T08:00:20Z 2016-04-29 Dissertation vt_gsexam:7215 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70880 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic ectopic
arrhythmogenesis
electrophysiology
tetrodotoxin
acetylcholine
isoproterenol
spellingShingle ectopic
arrhythmogenesis
electrophysiology
tetrodotoxin
acetylcholine
isoproterenol
Greer-Short, Amara D.
The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium
description The temporal nature of ectopic activity is important to elucidating the mechanisms that can lead to arrhythmogenesis. However, challenges remain in distinguishing between ectopic and non-ectopic beats. A new methodology was developed and validated to distinguish between beat types. Rapid pacing was used to induce both ectopic and non-ectopic beats. Using an electrocardiogram, the post-pacing recovery beat cycle length (RCL) and QRS were normalized to pre-paced R-R and QRS intervals and analyzed using a K-means clustering algorithm. Control hearts only produced beats with RCL ratios that increased with rapid pacing, suggestive of non-ectopic activity. Hypercalcemia and digoxin both produced significantly earlier beats with wider QRS durations, suggestive of ectopic activity. Increasing pacing further shortened RCL during digoxin + hypothermia, a mechanistic identifier of ectopic activity. When tested against a previously validated analysis, our algorithm performed well. Therefore, this electrocardiogram based algorithm distinguishes between ectopic and non-ectopic beats. In a prospective study, tetrodotoxin increased RCL ratio without changing the QRS duration of excited beats, suggesting neuronal sodium channels play an important role in ectopic beat timing. The next goal was to create a consistent model of ectopic activity. Both sympathetic and parasympathetic stimulation independently potentiate arrhythmogenesis, and we investigated the effects of independent and simultaneous stimulation on the temporal nature of arrhythmogenesis. Isoproterenol (ISO), a sympathetic agonist, transiently produced ectopic activity and increased heart rate. Acetylcholine (ACh), a parasympathetic agonist, did not significantly produce ectopic activity but did slow heart rate. ACh added after ISO also transiently produced ectopic activity, while heart rate remained slowed. Importantly, ISO following ACh persistently increased ectopic activity and heart rate. Therefore, ISO following ACh is an ideal model for creating sustained ectopic activity. Mature animals exhibited sustained arrhythmogenesis while young animals did not. When ACh was removed and then followed by ISO, ectopic activity and heart rate transiently increased, similar to ISO alone. This suggests that maintained ACh perfusion can sustain ISO sensitivity, in contrast to ISO perfusion alone. The data in this dissertation provide an insight into the mechanisms that affect the ectopic beat timing and arrhythmia propensity. === Ph. D.
author2 Biomedical Engineering
author_facet Biomedical Engineering
Greer-Short, Amara D.
author Greer-Short, Amara D.
author_sort Greer-Short, Amara D.
title The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium
title_short The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium
title_full The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium
title_fullStr The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium
title_full_unstemmed The Temporal Nature of Ectopic Activity in Guinea Pig Ventricular Myocardium
title_sort temporal nature of ectopic activity in guinea pig ventricular myocardium
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70880
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