4.5 Article

Effects of myocardial function and systemic circulation on regional coronary perfusion

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 128, Issue 5, Pages 1106-1122

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00450.2019

Keywords

cardiac-coronary coupling; coronary flow analysis; flow dispersion; heart failure; left ventricular mechanics; regional myocardial work; subendocardial ischemia

Funding

  1. NIH [HL134841, HL133359]
  2. American Heart Association Scientist Development Grant [17SDG33370110]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cardiac-coronary interaction and the effects of its pathophysiological variations on spatial heterogeneity of coronary perfusion and myocardial work are still poorly understood. This hypothesis-generating study predicts spatial heterogeneities in both regional cardiac work and perfusion that offer a new paradigm on the vulnerability of the subendocardium to ischemia. particularly at the apex. We propose a mathematical and computational modeling framework to simulate the interaction of left ventricular mechanics, systemic circulation. and coronary microcirculation. The computational simulations revealed that the relaxation rate of the myocardium has a significant effect whereas the contractility has a marginal effect on both the magnitude and transmural distribution of coronary perfusion. The ratio of subendocardial to subepicardial perfusion density (Q(endo)/Q(epi)) changed by -12 to +6% from a baseline value of 1.16 when myocardial contractility was varied by +25 and -10%, respectively; Q(endo)/Q(epi )changed by 37% when sarcomere relaxation rate, b, was faster and increased by 10% from the baseline value. The model predicts axial differences in regional myocardial work and perfusion density across the wall thickness. Regional myofiber work done at the apex is 30-50% lower than at the center region, whereas perfusion density in the apex is lower by only 18% compared with the center. There are large axial differences in coronary flow and myocardial work at the subendocardial locations, with the highest differences located at the apex region. A mismatch exists between perfusion density and regional work done at the subendocardium. This mismatch is speculated to be compensated by coronary autoregulation. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We present a model of left ventricle perfusion based on an anatomically realistic coronary tree structure that includes its interaction with the systemic circulation. Left ventricular relaxation rate has a significant effect on the regional distribution of coronary flow and myocardial work.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available