Title :
Role of the ATP-sensitive potassium current in the development of reentry in a ring model of cardiac tissue: a computer simulation study
Author :
Ferrero, JM, Jr. ; Torres, V. ; Saiz, J. ; Ferrero, JM ; Thakor, NV
Author_Institution :
L.I.B.-D.I.E., Univ. Politecnica de Valencia, Spain
Abstract :
The aim of this work is to study the influence of activation of the ATP-sensitive potassium (K/sub ATP/) current on vulnerability to reentry during cardiac hypoxia. A detailed mathematical model of this current was introduced into the Luo-Rudy model of the cardiac action potential (AP), and the electrical activity in a 1D ring of cardiac tissue was simulated. To reproduce the natural dispersion of the sensitivity of the K/sub ATP/ current to [ATP]/sub p/ the half-maximum inhibition constant of the channel was randomized following a Gaussian distribution. Hypoxia was simulated by appropriately reducing [ATP]/sub l/ and increasing [ADP]/sub r/. The simulated hypoxic APs show a significant shortening compared to control APs, and spatial inhomogeneity of action potential duration (APD) is enhanced by inhomogeneous K/sub ATP/ current activation. Moreover, the authors´ results show that the hypoxic APD dispersion caused by opening of K/sub ATP/ channels could be enough to elicit reentrant activity.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biology computing; biomembrane transport; cardiology; digital simulation; potassium; ATP-sensitive potassium current activation; ATP-sensitive potassium current role; Gaussian distribution; K; K/sub ATP/ channels; action potential duration; cardiac tissue ring model; computer simulation; half-maximum inhibition constant; hypoxia; reentry development; spatial inhomogeneity; Biomembranes; Boundary conditions; Cardiac tissue; Cardiology; Computational modeling; Conductivity; Differential equations; Gaussian distribution; Power cables; Random variables;
Conference_Titel :
Computers in Cardiology, 1996
Conference_Location :
Indianapolis, IN, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3710-7
DOI :
10.1109/CIC.1996.542609