Title of article :
Molecular mechanisms and global dynamics of fibrillation: an integrative approach to the underlying basis of vortex-like reentry
Author/Authors :
Jalife، نويسنده , , José and Berenfeld، نويسنده , , Omer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Art Winfreeʹs Scientific legacy has been particularly important to our laboratory whose major goal is to understand the mechanisms of ventricular fibrillation (VF). Here, we take an integrative approach to review recent studies on the manner in which nonlinear electrical waves organize to result in VF. We describe the contribution of specific potassium channel proteins and of the myocardial fiber structure to such organization. The discussion centers on data derived from a model of stable VF in the Langendorff-perfused guinea pig heart that demonstrates distinct patterns of organization in the left (LV) and right (RV) ventricles. Analysis of optical mapping data reveals that VF excitation frequencies are distributed throughout the ventricles in clearly demarcated domains. The highest frequency domains are found on the anterior wall of the LV at a location where sustained reentrant activity is present. The optical data suggest that a high frequency rotor that remains stationary in the LV is the mechanism that sustains VF in this model. Computer simulations predict that the inward rectifying potassium current ( I K 1 ) is an essential determinant of rotor stability and frequency, and patch-clamp results strongly suggest that the outward component of I K 1 of cells in the LV is significantly larger than in the RV. Additional computer simulations and analytical procedures predict that the filaments of the reentrant activity (scroll waves) adopt a non-random configuration depending on fiber organization within the ventricular wall. Using the minimal principle we have concluded that filaments align with the trajectory of least resistance (i.e. the geodesic) between their endpoints. Overall, the data discussed have opened new and potentially exciting avenues of research on the possible role played by inward rectifier channels in the mechanism of VF, as well as the organization of its reentrant sources in three-dimensional cardiac muscle. Such an integrative approach may lead us toward an understanding of the molecular and structural basis of VF and hopefully to new preventative approaches.
Keywords :
Inward rectifier channels , Minimal principle , Geodesic , Reentry , Rotors , Fibrillatory conduction
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology