Mechanism of reentry induction by a 9-V battery in rabbit ventricles

Author:

Bishop Martin J.1,Burton Rebecca A. B.2,Kalla Manish2,Nanthakumar Kumaraswamy3,Plank Gernot4,Bub Gil2,Vigmond Edward J.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, King's College London, London, United Kingdom;

2. Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom;

3. Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;

4. Institute of Biophysics, Medical University of Graz, Graz, Austria; and

5. l'Institut de Rythmologie et de Modélisation Cardiaque and Lab l'Institute de Mathématiques de Bordeaux, Université Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France

Abstract

Although the application of a 9-V battery to the epicardial surface is a simple method of ventricular fibrillation induction, the fundamental mechanisms underlying this process remain unstudied. We used a combined experimental and modelling approach to understand how the interaction of direct current (DC) from a battery may induce reentrant activity within rabbit ventricles and its dependence on battery application timing and duration. A rabbit ventricular computational model was used to simulate 9-V battery stimulation for different durations at varying onset times during sinus rhythm. Corresponding high-resolution optical mapping measurements were conducted on rabbit hearts with DC stimuli applied via a relay system. DC application to diastolic tissue induced anodal and cathodal make excitations in both simulations and experiments. Subsequently, similar static epicardial virtual electrode patterns were formed that interacted with sinus beats but did not induce reentry. Upon battery release during diastole, break excitations caused single ectopics, similar to application, before sinus rhythm resumed. Reentry induction was possible for short battery applications when break excitations were slowed and forced to take convoluted pathways upon interaction with refractory tissue from prior make excitations or sinus beats. Short-lived reentrant activity could be induced for battery release shortly after a sinus beat for longer battery applications. In conclusion, the application of a 9-V battery to the epicardial surface induces reentry through a complex interaction of break excitations after battery release with prior induced make excitations or sinus beats.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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