Virtual electrode induced phase singularity hypothesis explains the origin of cardiac arrhythmias caused by arti"cial electrical induction of rotors, i.e. vortex-like self-sustained sources of activity. This mechanism is thought to underlie both stimulus-induced arrhythmias and shock de"brillation t
The Pinwheel Experiment Revisited
β Scribed by Bradley J. Roth
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 245 KB
- Volume
- 190
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The critical point hypothesis explains the origin of some cardiac arrhythmias, and the bidomain model describes electrical stimulation of the heart. In this paper, the critical point hypothesis is combined with the bidomain model. The result is four new predictions about the pinwheel experiment, a fundamental experiment in cardiac electrophysiology. These are: (1) The duration of the vulnerable period during cathodal S2 stimulation is longer for an S1 wavefront propagating perpendicular to the fibers than for an S1 wavefront propagating parallel to the fibers. (2) For anodal S2 stimulation with the S1 wavefront propagating parallel to the fibers, the vulnerable period splits into two periods with an "invulnerable period" between them. (3) For anodal S2 stimulation with the S1 wavefront propagating perpendicular to the fibers, the vulnerable period consists of only one period. (4) A previously suggested mechanism for the upper limit of vulnerability (S2 is so strong that the entire tissue is depolarized by an amount greater than S*) is no longer applicable.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES