Title :
Simulation of arrhythmia using adaptive spatio-temporal resolution
Author :
Szilagyi, Sandor M. ; Szilagyi, L. ; Hirsbrunner, Beat
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland
Abstract :
Aims: This study is aimed to present the simulation of several types of cardiac arrhythmias using adaptively selected spatio-temporal resolution, involving the accuracy analysis of the experiment. Methods: We developed a spatio-temporal adaptive whole-heart simulation algorithm that handles automatically and regionally the proper resolution. The limits of upper and lower resolutions (0.2-5 mm; 1-500 J-ls) are a priori established, while the granularity at a given moment depends on the type, place and state of each modeled compartment. We employed the effect of muscle fiber direction, laminar sheet effect, average and minimal depolarization period, and cell inhomogeneity. Results: The estimation errors were maximal during fast depolarization phase of the activation potential. Under normal circumstances, tachycardia and bradycardia, a 2/5/10/20 times lower spatial resolution induced an about 3%/7%/12%/20% estimation error of the depolarizing front line´s shape. In the presence of AF/VF, under similar simulation conditions, the estimation error raised to 7%/15%/22%/34%. Conclusion: The simulation of cardiac arrhythmia demands high spatio-temporal resolution during fast depolarization phase and in presence of AF/VF due to the irregular spread of depolarization.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; cardiology; cellular biophysics; medical computing; medical disorders; muscle; physiological models; spatiotemporal phenomena; AF/VF; accuracy analysis; activation potential; average depolarization period; bradycardia; cardiac arrhythmia simulation; cell inhomogeneity; depolarizing front line shape; estimation errors; fast depolarization phase; granularity; high spatio-temporal resolution; laminar sheet effect; lower resolutions; minimal depolarization period; modeled compartment place; modeled compartment state; modeled compartment type; muscle fiber direction; spatial resolution; spatio-temporal adaptive whole-heart simulation algorithm; tachycardia; upper resolutions; Abstracts; Adaptation models; Computational modeling; Fibrillation; Image resolution;
Conference_Titel :
Computing in Cardiology Conference (CinC), 2013
Conference_Location :
Zaragoza
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0884-4