• DocumentCode
    1589794
  • Title

    A model study on excitation in cardiac muscle under electrical field stimulation

  • Author

    Toyama, J. ; Taniguchi, A. ; Shirakawa, M. ; Anno, T. ; Usui, S. ; Kodama, I.

  • Author_Institution
    Res. Inst. of Environ. Med., Nagoya Univ., Japan
  • fYear
    1992
  • Firstpage
    699
  • Lastpage
    702
  • Abstract
    The authors investigated the excitation process of the cardiac muscle under electrical field stimulation using guinea pig hearts and a mathematical model. Maximum upstroke velocity of action potentials elicited by the field stimulation had a wide range of value, and its mean value was about a half as high as that from the single ventriculocytes. The phase planes of upstrokes under the field stimulation were indistinguishable from those during propagation. These results indicate that the whole cardiac tissue does not excite homogeneously, and action potential propagation does occur within the tissue. A mathematical model analysis revealed that the diverse passive membrane property of each cell was able to reproduce the inhomogeneous excitation pattern similar to that observed experimentally. It is concluded that the diverse cell membrane properties have an important role in tissue excitation under field stimulation
  • Keywords
    bioelectric phenomena; biological effects of fields; biology computing; cardiology; digital simulation; muscle; physiological models; action potentials; cardiac muscle; computer simulation; electrical field stimulation; excitation; guinea pig hearts; mathematical model; maximum upstroke velocity; model study; Biomembranes; Cardiac tissue; Clamps; Electrodes; Finite impulse response filter; Heart; Mathematical model; Muscles; Nonuniform electric fields; Voltage;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computers in Cardiology 1992, Proceedings of
  • Conference_Location
    Durham, NC
  • Print_ISBN
    0-8186-3552-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CIC.1992.269337
  • Filename
    269337