Electrophysiological properties of computational human ventricular cell action potential models under acute ischemic conditions

Sara Dutta, Ana Mincholé, T. Alexander Quinn, Blanca Rodriguez

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículo de revisiónrevisión exhaustiva

67 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Acute myocardial ischemia is one of the main causes of sudden cardiac death. The mechanisms have been investigated primarily in experimental and computational studies using different animal species, but human studies remain scarce. In this study, we assess the ability of four human ventricular action potential models (ten Tusscher and Panfilov, 2006; Grandi et al., 2010; Carro et al., 2011; O'Hara et al., 2011) to simulate key electrophysiological consequences of acute myocardial ischemia in single cell and tissue simulations. We specifically focus on evaluating the effect of extracellular potassium concentration and activation of the ATP-sensitive inward-rectifying potassium current on action potential duration, post-repolarization refractoriness, and conduction velocity, as the most critical factors in determining reentry vulnerability during ischemia. Our results show that the Grandi and O'Hara models required modifications to reproduce expected ischemic changes, specifically modifying the intracellular potassium concentration in the Grandi model and the sodium current in the O'Hara model. With these modifications, the four human ventricular cell AP models analyzed in this study reproduce the electrophysiological alterations in repolarization, refractoriness, and conduction velocity caused by acute myocardial ischemia. However, quantitative differences are observed between the models and overall, the ten Tusscher and modified O'Hara models show closest agreement to experimental data.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)40-52
Número de páginas13
PublicaciónProgress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology
Volumen129
DOI
EstadoPublished - oct. 2017

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Wellcome Trust Fellowship in Basic Biomedical Sciences [grant number 100246/Z/12/Z to B.R.], an Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council doctoral scholarship [EPSRC ref: EP/G03706X/1 to S.D.], a Marie Curie Intra-European fellowship for Career Development [to A.M.], a Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada National New Investigator Award [to T.A.Q.], and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP 142424 to T.A.Q.] and Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation [MED-EST-2014-9582 to T.A.Q.].

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Authors

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Biophysics
  • Molecular Biology

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