Mechano‐electrical interactions and heterogeneities in wild‐type and drug‐induced long QT syndrome rabbits

Author:

Lewetag Raphaela D.12ORCID,Nimani Saranda3,Alerni Nicolò3,Hornyik Tibor123,Jacobi Simon F.24,Moss Robin25,Menza Marius6,Pilia Nicolas7,Walz Teo P.25ORCID,HajiRassouliha Amir8,Perez‐Feliz Stefanie2,Zehender Manfred1,Seemann Gunnar2ORCID,Zgierski‐Johnston Callum M.2ORCID,Lopez Ruben3ORCID,Odening Katja E.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology and Angiology I University Heart Center Freiburg, University Medical Center Freiburg Freiburg Germany

2. Institute for Experimental Cardiovascular Medicine University Heart Center Freiburg – Bad Krozingen and Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany

3. Translational Cardiology, Department of Cardiology and Department of Physiology University Hospital Bern Bern Switzerland

4. Department of Congenital Heart Defects and Pediatric Cardiology University Heart Center Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany

5. Fraunhofer Institute for High‐Speed Dynamics Ernst‐Mach‐Institute EMI Freiburg Germany

6. Department of Radiology, Medical Physics University Hospital Freiburg, and Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg Germany

7. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Karlsruhe Germany

8. Auckland Bioengineering Institute Auckland New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractElectromechanical reciprocity – comprising electro‐mechanical (EMC) and mechano‐electric coupling (MEC) – provides cardiac adaptation to changing physiological demands. Understanding electromechanical reciprocity and its impact on function and heterogeneity in pathological conditions – such as (drug‐induced) acquired long QT syndrome (aLQTS) – might lead to novel insights in arrhythmogenesis. Our aim is to investigate how electrical changes impact on mechanical function (EMC) and vice versa (MEC) under physiological conditions and in aLQTS. To measure regional differences in EMC and MEC in vivo, we used tissue phase mapping cardiac MRI and a 24‐lead ECG vest in healthy (control) and IKr‐blocker E‐4031‐induced aLQTS rabbit hearts. MEC was studied in vivo by acutely increasing cardiac preload, and ex vivo by using voltage optical mapping (OM) in beating hearts at different preloads. In aLQTS, electrical repolarization (heart rate corrected RT‐interval, RTn370) was prolonged compared to control (P < 0.0001) with increased spatial and temporal RT heterogeneity (P < 0.01). Changing electrical function (in aLQTS) resulted in significantly reduced diastolic mechanical function and prolonged contraction duration (EMC), causing increased apico‐basal mechanical heterogeneity. Increased preload acutely prolonged RTn370 in both control and aLQTS hearts (MEC). This effect was more pronounced in aLQTS (P < 0.0001). Additionally, regional RT‐dispersion increased in aLQTS. Motion‐correction allowed us to determine APD‐prolongation in beating aLQTS hearts, but limited motion correction accuracy upon preload‐changes prevented a clear analysis of MEC ex vivo. Mechano‐induced RT‐prolongation and increased heterogeneity were more pronounced in aLQTS than in healthy hearts. Acute MEC effects may play an additional role in LQT‐related arrhythmogenesis, warranting further mechanistic investigations. imageKey points Electromechanical reciprocity comprising excitation‐contraction coupling (EMC) and mechano‐electric feedback loops (MEC) is essential for physiological cardiac function. Alterations in electrical and/or mechanical heterogeneity are known to have potentially pro‐arrhythmic effects. In this study, we aimed to investigate how electrical changes impact on the mechanical function (EMC) and vice versa (MEC) both under physiological conditions (control) and in acquired long QT syndrome (aLQTS). We show that changing the electrical function (in aLQTS) results in significantly altered mechanical heterogeneity via EMC and, vice versa, that increasing the preload acutely prolongs repolarization duration and increases electrical heterogeneity, particularly in aLQTS as compared to control. Our results substantiate the hypothesis that LQTS is an ‛electro‐mechanical’, rather than a ‘purely electrical’, disease and suggest that acute MEC effects may play an additional role in LQT‐related arrhythmogenesis.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

California Department of Fish and Game

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology

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