4.6 Article

Structural contributions to fibrillatory rotors in a patient-derived computational model of the atria

Journal

EUROPACE
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages 3-10

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/europace/euu251

Keywords

Atrial fibrillation; Rotors; Focal impulse and rotor mapping; FIRM; Phase mapping; Computational modelling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1R01HL105242, 1R01HL96544, 8P41 GM103226, P50 GM0945503, HL083359, HL103800]
  2. NIH pre-doctoral training grant [T32 EB009380]

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Aims The aim of this study was to investigate structural contributions to the maintenance of rotors in human atrial fibrillation (AF) and possible mechanisms of termination. Methods and results A three-dimensional human biatrial finite element model based on patient-derived computed tomography and arrhythmia observed at electrophysiology study was used to study AF. With normal physiological electrical conductivity and effective refractory periods (ERPs), wave break failed to sustain reentrant activity or electrical rotors. Withdepressed excitability, decreased conduction anisotropy, and shorter ERP characteristic of AF, reentrant rotors were readily maintained. Rotors were transiently or permanently trapped by fibre discontinuities on the lateral wall of the right atrium near the tricuspid valve orifice and adjacent to the crista terminalis, both known sites of right atrial arrhythmias. Modelling inexcitable regions near the rotor tip to simulate fibrosis anchored the rotors, converting the arrhythmia to macro-reentry. Accordingly, increasing the spatial core of inexcitable tissue decreased the frequency of rotation, widened the excitable gap, and enabled an external wave to impinge on the rotor core and displace the source. Conclusion These model findings highlight the importance of structural features in rotor dynamics and suggest that regions of fibrosis may anchor fibrillatory rotors. Increasing extent of fibrosis and scar may eventually convert fibrillation to excitable gap reentry. Such macro-reentry can then be eliminated by extending the obstacle or by external stimuli that penetrate the excitable gap.

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