• DocumentCode
    1084685
  • Title

    A mathematical model of make and break electrical stimulation of cardiac tissue by a unipolar anode or cathode

  • Author

    Roth, Bradley J.

  • Author_Institution
    Biomed. Eng. & Instrum. Program, Nat. Inst. of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
  • Volume
    42
  • Issue
    12
  • fYear
    1995
  • Firstpage
    1174
  • Lastpage
    1184
  • Abstract
    Numerical simulations of electrical stimulation of cardiac tissue using a unipolar extracellular electrode were performed. The bidomain model with unequal anisotropy ratios represented the tissue, and the Beeler-Reuter model represented the active membrane properties. Four types of excitation were considered: cathode make (CM), anode make (AM), cathode break (CB), and anode break (AB). The mechanisms of excitation were: for CM, tissue under the cathode was depolarized to threshold; for AM, tissue at a virtual cathode was depolarized to threshold; for CB, a long cathodal pulse produced a steady-state depolarization under the cathode and hyperpolarization at a virtual anode. At the end (break) of the pulse, the depolarization diffused into the hyperpolarized tissue, resulting in excitation. For AB, a long anodal pulse produced a steady-state hyperpolarization under the anode and depolarization at a virtual cathode. At the end (break) of the pulse, the depolarization diffused into the hyperpolarized tissue, resulting in excitation. For AB stimulation, decay of the hyperpolarization faster than that of the depolarization was necessary. The thresholds for rheobase and diastolic CM, AM, CB, and AB stimulation were 0.038, 0.41, 0.49, and 5.3 mA, respectively, for an electrode length of 1 mm and a surface area of 1.5 mm 2. Threshold increased as the size of the electrode increased. The strength-duration curves for CM and AM were similar except when the duration was shorter than 0.2 ms, in which case the AM threshold rose more quickly with decreasing duration than did the CM threshold. CM and AM resulted in similar strength-frequency curves. The model agrees qualitatively, but (in some cases) not quantitatively, with experiments.
  • Keywords
    bioelectric phenomena; cardiology; patient treatment; physiological models; 0.038 to 5.3 mA; 0.2 ms; 1 mm; Beeler-Reuter model; active membrane properties; bidomain model; cardiac tissue; depolarization; hyperpolarized tissue; make/break electrical stimulation; mathematical model; rheobase; strength-frequency curves; unequal anisotropy ratios; unipolar anode; unipolar cathode; virtual cathode; Anisotropic magnetoresistance; Anodes; Cardiac tissue; Cathodes; Electrical stimulation; Electrodes; Extracellular; Mathematical model; Numerical simulation; Steady-state; Animals; Electric Conductivity; Electric Stimulation; Electrodes; Heart; Humans; Mathematics; Membrane Potentials; Models, Cardiovascular;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/10.476124
  • Filename
    476124