Title :
New frequency entrainment scenario in a pair of cardiac cells coupled through a variable resistance
Author :
Jamaleddine, Rabih S. ; Vinet, Alain ; Roberge, Femand A.
Author_Institution :
Inst. de Genie Biomed., Montreal Univ., Que., Canada
fDate :
31 Oct-3 Nov 1996
Abstract :
Describe the frequency entrainment behavior of a pair of cardiac cells coupled through a variable resistance (Rj) which is a function of the intracellular calcium concentration and a scaling parameter Rb. Rj is increased with higher firing rates in both cells. If Rb is high enough, Rj reaches a value for which the coupling current is too low to trigger an active response in the follower cell. The missed response causes a shortening of the action potential duration in the paced cell. These two factors force Rj to decrease, thereby removing some of the previous decoupling effect. For a pair of cells with a fixed coupling resistance, the activation ratio of the frequency entrainment responses was found to change abruptly when the value of the coupling resistance was changed. With the variable coupling resistance, using Rb as the bifurcation parameter, the negative feedback effect of the firing rates on Rj makes the transition from one mode to the other more gradual. The resulting rhythm is a succession of stable patterns consisting of a mix of the adjacent activation ratios appearing on the bifurcation map of the fixed resistance system
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; cardiology; cellular biophysics; physiological models; Ca; activation ratio; bifurcation parameter; cellular firing rate; coupled cardiac cells pair; fixed resistance system; frequency entrainment responses; frequency entrainment scenario; intracellular calcium concentration; negative feedback effect; rhythm; scaling parameter; stable patterns; variable resistance; Bifurcation; Biomembranes; Calcium; Cardiac tissue; Cells (biology); Frequency; Immune system; Negative feedback; Rhythm; Surface resistance;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 1996. Bridging Disciplines for Biomedicine. Proceedings of the 18th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Amsterdam
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3811-1
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.1996.652806