Markov modeling of phase singularity interaction effects in human atrial and ventricular fibrillation

Author:

Jenkins Evan V.1ORCID,Dharmaprani Dhani12ORCID,Schopp Madeline2ORCID,Quah Jing Xian13ORCID,Tiver Kathryn3ORCID,Mitchell Lewis4ORCID,Nash Martyn P.5ORCID,Clayton Richard H.6ORCID,Pope Kenneth2ORCID,Ganesan Anand N.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University 1 , Adelaide 5042, Australia

2. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University 2 , Adelaide 5042, Australia

3. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Flinders Medical Centre 3 , Adelaide 5042, Australia

4. School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Adelaide 4 , Adelaide 5005, Australia

5. Auckland Bioengineering Institute, University of Auckland 5 , Auckland 1010, New Zealand

6. Insigneo Institute for In Silico Medicine and Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield 6 , Sheffield, S1 4DP, United Kingdom

Abstract

Atrial and ventricular fibrillation (AF/VF) are characterized by the repetitive regeneration of topological defects known as phase singularities (PSs). The effect of PS interactions has not been previously studied in human AF and VF. We hypothesized that PS population size would influence the rate of PS formation and destruction in human AF and VF, due to increased inter-defect interaction. PS population statistics were studied in computational simulations (Aliev–Panfilov), human AF and human VF. The influence of inter-PS interactions was evaluated by comparison between directly modeled discrete-time Markov chain (DTMC) transition matrices of the PS population changes, and M/M/∞ birth-death transition matrices of PS dynamics, which assumes that PS formations and destructions are effectively statistically independent events. Across all systems examined, PS population changes differed from those expected with M/M/∞. In human AF and VF, the formation rates decreased slightly with PS population when modeled with the DTMC, compared with the static formation rate expected through M/M/∞, suggesting new formations were being inhibited. In human AF and VF, the destruction rates increased with PS population for both models, with the DTMC rate increase exceeding the M/M/∞ estimates, indicating that PS were being destroyed faster as the PS population grew. In human AF and VF, the change in PS formation and destruction rates as the population increased differed between the two models. This indicates that the presence of additional PS influenced the likelihood of new PS formation and destruction, consistent with the notion of self-inhibitory inter-PS interactions.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

National Heart Foundation of Australia

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Applied Mathematics,General Physics and Astronomy,Mathematical Physics,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics

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