DocumentCode
833558
Title
A Comparison of Monodomain and Bidomain Reaction-Diffusion Models for Action Potential Propagation in the Human Heart
Author
Potse, M. ; Dube, B. ; Richer, J. ; Vinet, A. ; Gulrajani, R.M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Physiol., Montreal Univ., Que.
Volume
53
Issue
12
fYear
2006
Firstpage
2425
Lastpage
2435
Abstract
A bidomain reaction-diffusion model of the human heart was developed, and potentials resulting from normal depolarization and repolarization were compared with results from a compatible monodomain model. Comparisons were made for an empty isolated heart and for a heart with fluid-filled ventricles. Both sinus rhythm and ectopic activation were simulated. The bidomain model took 2 days on 32 processors to simulate a complete cardiac cycle. Differences between monodomain and bidomain results were extremely small, even for the extracellular potentials, which in case of the monodomain model were computed with a high-resolution forward model. Propagation of activation was 2% faster in the bidomain model than in the monodomain model. Electrograms computed with monodomain and bidomain models were visually indistinguishable. We conclude that, in the absence of applied currents, propagating action potentials on the scale of a human heart can be studied with a monodomain model
Keywords
bioelectric potentials; cardiology; cellular biophysics; physiological models; reaction-diffusion systems; 2 day; action potential propagation; bidomain reaction-diffusion model; depolarization; ectopic activation; electrograms; extracellular potentials; fluid-filled ventricles; human heart; monodomain reaction-diffusion model; repolarization; sinus rhythm; Biomedical engineering; Biomembranes; Computational modeling; Extracellular; Heart; Hospitals; Humans; Maxwell equations; Physiology; Testing; Bidomain model; cardiac membrane model; computer heart model; monodomain model; Action Potentials; Animals; Body Surface Potential Mapping; Computer Simulation; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Heart Conduction System; Humans; Models, Cardiovascular; Pericardium;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2006.880875
Filename
4015619
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