The human heart is a closed-loop density wave engine: GENKI (元気, dN/dt) inhabiting KOKU (刻, ∫N dt). Electromagnetic interference (EMI) is externally imposed D-increase under V=N/D — friction injected into the GENKI/KOKU engine. Three failure modes are defined: phase desynchronization (arrhythmia), loop partial collapse (ventricular fibrillation), and loop collapse (sudden cardiac death — the hollow eye socket moment where KOKU remains and GENKI departs). KHDS-EM is extended to v3.0 with three new requirements: loop resonance protection, ionic gradient field protection, and KOKU geometry axis alignment. Kawasaki Kazuo's 悲の器 (vessel of compassion) is reinterpreted at the density wave level. The cardiac electromagnetic design problem is reframed as a cosmological alignment problem under the V=N/D universal compression law.
Yoshimitsu Katayama (Mon,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: