Title :
Effects of stretch on heart rhythm: theory & practice
Author :
Kohl, P. ; Cooper, P. ; Cheng, L.-X. ; Linz, K. ; Garny, Alan ; Hunter, P. ; Noble, D.
Author_Institution :
Lab. of Physiol., Oxford Univ., UK
Abstract :
Effects of stretch on heart rhythm have been known for over a century. They possess considerable clinical importance and range from the increase in heart rate during enhanced venous return to the right atrium (Bainbridge effect) to sudden cardiac death caused by pre-cordial chest thumps (Commotio cordis). The underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms have only recently started to become evident and include stretch-activation of ion channels and mechanical modulation of intracellular calcium handling. We have investigated the effects of stretch-activation of ion channels in working myocardium, pacemaker cells and cardiac fibroblasts, using experimental procedures (single and double cell patch-clamp technique as well as in-situ recordings) and mathematical modelling (single cell `ionic´ models, cell pairs, tissue sheets and anatomical models). Our findings illustrate why (i) transient stretch may trigger ectopic excitation via depolarization of resting myocytes or fibroblasts; (ii) sustained stretch may increase the heart´s susceptibility to re-entry by generating spatial and temporal dispersion of excitability, refractoriness and electrical load; (iii) combined cyclic and maintained stretch, as occurs during ischaemic bulging of myocardium, is particularly arrhythmogenic; and (iv) areas of increased connective tissue content, like post-ischaemic scars or regions of fibrosis, are prone to act as foci of ectopic excitation
Keywords :
biocontrol; bioelectric potentials; biological tissues; biomembrane transport; cardiology; muscle; physiological models; Bainbridge effect; Ca; Commotio cordis; anatomical models; arrhythmogenic; cardiac fibroblasts; cell pairs; cellular mechanism; clinical importance; cyclic stretch; depolarization; double cell patch-clamp technique; ectopic excitation; electrical load; enhanced venous return; excitability; fibroblasts; fibrosis; heart rate; heart rhythm; in-situ recordings; increased connective tissue content; intracellular calcium handling; ion channels; ionic models; ischaemic bulging; maintained stretch; mathematical modelling; mechanical modulation; molecular mechanism; myocardium; pacemaker cells; post-ischaemic scars; pre-cordial chest thumps; refractoriness; resting myocytes; right atrium; single cell patch-clamp technique; spatial dispersion; stretch effects; stretch-activation; sudden cardiac death; sustained stretch; temporal dispersion; tissue sheets; transient stretch; working myocardium; Calcium; Connective tissue; Distributed power generation; Fibroblasts; Heart rate; Heart rate variability; Mathematical model; Myocardium; Pacemakers; Rhythm;
Conference_Titel :
[Engineering in Medicine and Biology, 1999. 21st Annual Conference and the 1999 Annual Fall Meetring of the Biomedical Engineering Society] BMES/EMBS Conference, 1999. Proceedings of the First Joint
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5674-8
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.1999.804363