TY - JOUR
T1 - Transmural, interventricular, apicobasal and anteroposterior action potential duration gradients are all essential to the genesis of the concordant and realistic T wave
T2 - A whole-heart model study
AU - Zheng, Yi
AU - Wei, Daming
AU - Zhu, Xin
AU - Chen, Wenxi
AU - Fukuda, Koji
AU - Shimokawa, Hiroaki
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is supported in part by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science under the Grants-In-Aid for Scientific Research ( No. 24500369).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2016/7/1
Y1 - 2016/7/1
N2 - Background It has been reported that ventricular repolarization dispersion resulting from transmural, apicobasal and interventricular action potential duration (APD) gradients makes the T wave concordant with the QRS complex. Method and results A whole-heart model integrating transmural, apicobasal, interventricular and anteroposterior APD gradients was used, and the corresponding electrocardiograms were simulated to study the influence of these APD gradients on the T-wave amplitudes. The simulation results showed that changing a single APD gradient (e.g., interventricular APD gradient alone) only made substantial changes to the T-wave amplitudes in a limited number of leads and was not able to generate T waves with amplitudes comparable with clinical findings in all leads. A combination of transmural, apicobasal and interventricular APD gradients could simulate T waves with amplitudes similar to clinical values in the limb leads only. Adding the anteroposterior APD gradient into the model greatly improved the consistency between the simulated T-wave amplitudes and the clinical values. Conclusion The simulation results support that the transmural, apicobasal, interventricular and the anteroposterior APD gradient are all essential to the genesis of the clinical T wave.
AB - Background It has been reported that ventricular repolarization dispersion resulting from transmural, apicobasal and interventricular action potential duration (APD) gradients makes the T wave concordant with the QRS complex. Method and results A whole-heart model integrating transmural, apicobasal, interventricular and anteroposterior APD gradients was used, and the corresponding electrocardiograms were simulated to study the influence of these APD gradients on the T-wave amplitudes. The simulation results showed that changing a single APD gradient (e.g., interventricular APD gradient alone) only made substantial changes to the T-wave amplitudes in a limited number of leads and was not able to generate T waves with amplitudes comparable with clinical findings in all leads. A combination of transmural, apicobasal and interventricular APD gradients could simulate T waves with amplitudes similar to clinical values in the limb leads only. Adding the anteroposterior APD gradient into the model greatly improved the consistency between the simulated T-wave amplitudes and the clinical values. Conclusion The simulation results support that the transmural, apicobasal, interventricular and the anteroposterior APD gradient are all essential to the genesis of the clinical T wave.
KW - Action potential duration gradient
KW - Computer simulation
KW - Electrocardiogram
KW - T wave
KW - Whole-heart model
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2016.03.010
DO - 10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2016.03.010
M3 - Article
C2 - 27034121
AN - SCOPUS:84990949291
SN - 0022-0736
VL - 49
SP - 569
EP - 578
JO - Journal of Electrocardiology
JF - Journal of Electrocardiology
IS - 4
ER -