4.7 Article

A new active contraction model for the myocardium using a modified hill model

Journal

COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 145, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2022.105417

Keywords

Myocardial contraction; Active strain; Hill model; Length-dependence; Force-velocity; Personalized cardiac modelling

Funding

  1. UK EPSRC [EP/ N014642/1, EP/S030875, EP/S020950/1, EP/S014284/1, EP/ R511705/1]
  2. EPSRC ECR Capital Award [308011]
  3. National Science Foundation of China [11871399]
  4. Chinese Scholarship Council
  5. University of Glasgow

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This study develops a new hybrid active contraction model for myocardial dynamics that combines the active-stress based Hill model and the active strain approach. The model demonstrates a high descriptive capability and accurately simulates cardiac dynamics. It incorporates both passive and active branches, with the active stress formulated using the active strain approach and considering length-dependence and force-velocity relationships. The study also highlights the tight interaction between length-dependence and force-velocity relationships and the potential of the hybrid model in personalized cardiac modeling and understanding multi-scale coupling in active contraction based on the sliding filament theory.
This study develops a new hybrid active contraction model for myocardial dynamics abstracted from sarcomere by combining the phenomenologically active-stress based Hill model and the micro-structurally motivated active strain approach. This new model consists of a passive branch and a parallel active branch that consists of a serial passive element for active tension transmission and a contractile unit for active tension development. This rheology represents an additive decomposition of the total stress into a passive and active response. The active stress is formulated following the active strain approach based on the sliding filament theory by multiplicatively decomposing the stretch of the contractile element into a fictitious and an active part. The length-dependence and force-velocity are further incorporated in the active strain. We estimate the passive stiffness of the serial passive element using literature data, which is 250 kPa, then the active stress is computed from the serial passive element in the active branch because of its force transmission structure. This one-dimensional contraction model is further generalized to three dimensions for modelling myocardial dynamics. Our results demonstrate that the proposed active contraction model has a high descriptive capability for various experiments, including both isometric and isotonic contraction compared to existing active strain approaches. We also show that it can simulate physiologically accurate cardiac dynamics in humans. The excellent agreement with experimental data and a local sensitivity study highlight the importance of length-dependence and force-velocity in the active strain approach. Our results further show that there exists a tight interaction between the length-dependence and force velocity relationships. This new hybrid model serves as a step forward in personalized cardiac modelling using an active-strain based contraction model and has the potential to understand the multi-scale coupling in active contraction according to the sliding filament theory.

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