Abstract
AbstractSimplified nonlinear models of biological cells are widely used in computational electrophysiology. The models reproduce qualitatively many of the characteristics of various organs, such as the heart, brain, and intestine. In contrast to complex cellular ion-channel models, the simplified models usually contain a small number of variables and parameters, which facilitates nonlinear analysis and reduces computational load. In this paper, we consider pacemaking variants of the Aliev-Panfilov and Corrado two-variable excitable cell models. We conducted a numerical simulation study of these models and investigated the main nonlinear dynamic features of both isolated cells and 1D coupled pacemaker-excitable systems. Simulations of the 2D sinoatrial node and 3D intestine tissue as application examples of combined pacemaker-excitable systems demonstrated results similar to obtained previously. The uniform formulation for the conventional excitable cell models and proposed pacemaker models allows a convenient and easy implementation for the construction of personalized physiological models, inverse tissue modeling, and development of real-time simulation systems for various organs that contain both pacemaker and excitable cells.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference69 articles.
1. How the Hodgkin-Huxley equations inspired the Cardiac Physiome Project
2. Computational models in cardiology;Nat Rev Cardiol,2019
3. Simulating human cardiac electrophysiology on clinical time-scales;Front Physiol,2011
4. A guide to modelling cardiac electrical activity in anatomically detailed ventricles
5. Closed-loop quantitative verification of rate-Adaptive pacemakers. ACM Trans Cyber-Phys;Syst,2018