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- Title
Computer Model of the Atrioventricular Node Predicts Reentrant Arrhythmias.
- Authors
Leffler, Christopher T.; Saul, J. Philip
- Abstract
Introduction: Following atrial premature beats, the AV node may exhibit sustained reentrant tachyarrhythmias, isolated echo beats, or discontinuities in the recovery curve (the plot of conduction time versus atrial cycle length). A computer model was used to examine the hypothesis that spatial variation of AV nodal passive electrical resistance may account for these phenomena. Methods and Results: A computer model of a rectangular lattice of electrotonically linked elements whose ionic kinetics simulated nodal ionic flux was developed. The model showed that there exists a resistance value that minimizes the effective refractory period, because high resistance prevents depolarization of distal elements, while low resistance allows leakage of depolarizing current by electrotonic transmission, preventing activation of proximal elements. High resistances stabilized reentry by slowing conduction. Simulations incorporating equal resistance values between elements predicted increased AV nodal conduction times with increasing prematurity of atrial impulses. A model with a gradual change in resistance between fibers produced discontinuities and tachycardia, but not both simultaneously. Uniform anisotropy produced preferential transverse block, leading to echo beats and Ȝfast-slowț tachycardia, but not recovery curve discontinuities. Nonuniform anisotropy could produce reentry, but tachycardia often occurred without discontinuities. Dividing the lattice into two electrotonically linked parallel pathways with different resistance values (Ȝdual pathway modeț) predicted recovery curve discontinuities, echo beats, and tachycardia. At critical atrial cycle lengths, only the (high resistance) slow pathway conducted antegradely, while the fast pathway conducted retrogradely, to generate the typical Ȝslow-fastț tachycardia. Responses of the dual pathway model to ablation were consistent with clinical data, including the previous observation of a decrease in fast pathway effective refractory period after slow pathway ablation. Conclusion: Differences in passive electrical resistance of electrotonically linked dual pathways within the AV node may account for functional longitudinal dissociation, reentrant arrhythmias, and responses to catheter ablation therapy
- Subjects
ATRIOVENTRICULAR node; HEART conduction system; ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY; PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of electricity; COMPUTER simulation; CATHETER ablation; CATHETERIZATION
- Publication
Pacing & Clinical Electrophysiology, 1994, Vol 17, Issue 1, p113
- ISSN
0147-8389
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1540-8159.1994.tb01359.x