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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (January 29, 2004). doi:10.1152/ajpheart.01013.2003
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Submitted on October 27, 2003
Accepted on January 22, 2004

Transmural mechanics at a left ventricular epicardial pacing site

Hiroshi Ashikaga1, Jeffrey H. Omens1, Neil B. Ingels, Jr.2, and James W. Covell1*

1 Departments of Medicine and Bioengineering, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
2 Laboratory of Cardiovascular Physiology and Biophysics, Palo Alto Medical Foundation, Research Institute, Palo Alto, CA, USA; Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jcovell{at}ucsd.edu.

Left ventricular (LV) epicardial pacing acutely reduces wall thickening at the pacing site. Because LV epicardial pacing also reduces transverse shear deformation, which is related to myocardial sheet shear, we hypothesized that impaired end-systolic wall thickening at the pacing site is due to reduction in myocardial sheet shear deformation, resulting in a reduced contribution of sheet shear to wall thickening. We also hypothesized that epicardial pacing would reverse transmural mechanical activation sequence, and thereby mitigate normal transmural deformation. To test these hypotheses, we investigated the effects of LV epicardial pacing on transmural fiber-sheet mechanics by determining 3-D finite deformation during normal atrioventricular (AV) conduction and LV epicardial pacing in the anterior wall of normal dog hearts in vivo. Our measurements indicate that impaired end-systolic wall thickening at the pacing site was not due to selective reduction of sheet shear, but rather resulted from overall depression of fiber-sheet deformation, and relative contributions of sheet strains to wall thickening were maintained. These findings suggest lack of effective end-systolic myocardial deformation at the pacing site, most likely because the pacing site initiates contraction significantly earlier than the rest of the ventricle. Epicardial pacing also induced reversal of the transmural mechanical activation sequence, which depressed sheet extension and wall thickening early in the cardiac cycle, whereas transverse shear and sheet shear deformation were not affected. These findings suggest that normal sheet extension and wall thickening immediately following activation may require normal transmural activation sequence, while sheet shear deformation may be determined by local anatomy.




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