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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 293: H1781-H1790, 2007. First published June 22, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00014.2007
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The pinwheel experiment revisited: effects of cellular electrophysiological properties on vulnerability to cardiac reentry

Ming-Jim Yang,1,4 Diana X. Tran,1,4,5 James N. Weiss,1,2,3 Alan Garfinkel,1,2,4 and Zhilin Qu1,2

1Cardiovascular Research Laboratory and Departments of 2Medicine (Cardiology), 3Physiology, 4Physiological Science, and 5Molecular, Cellular, and Integrative Physiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California

Submitted 4 January 2007 ; accepted in final form 15 June 2007

In normal heart, ventricular fibrillation can be induced by a single properly timed strong electrical or mechanical stimulus. A mechanism first proposed by Winfree and coined the "pinwheel experiment" emphasizes the timing and strength of the stimulus in inducing figure-of-eight reentry. However, the effects of cellular electrophysiological properties on vulnerability to reentry in the pinwheel scenario have not been investigated. In this study, we extend Winfree's pinwheel experiment to show how the vulnerability to reentry is affected by the graded action potential responses induced by a strong premature stimulus, action potential duration (APD), and APD restitution in simulated monodomain homogeneous two-dimensional tissue. We find that a larger graded response, longer APD, or steeper APD restitution slope reduces the vulnerable window of reentry. Strong graded responses and long APD promote tip-tip interactions at long coupling intervals, causing the two initiated spiral wave tips to annihilate. Steep APD restitution promotes wave front-wave back interaction, causing conduction block in the central common pathway of figure-of-eight reentry. We derive an analytical treatment that shows good agreement with numerical simulation results.

vulnerable window; cardiac simulation; arrhythmias



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: Z. Qu, Dept. of Medicine (Cardiology), David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, BH-307 CHS, 10833 Le Conte Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90095 (e-mail: zqu{at}mednet.ucla.edu)







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