Wavefront curvature on a small spatial scale plays an important role in cardiac impulse propagation, electrical stimulation, formation of conduction block, and spiral wave dynamics.
Cardiac impulse propagation
Wavefront curvature
It is traditionally assumed that impulse propagation in cardiac muscle is determined by the combination of two factors: (1) the active properties of cardiac cell membranes and (2) the passive electrical characteristics of the network formed by cardiac cells. However, advances made recently in the theory of generic excitable media suggest that an additional factor-the geometry of excitation wavefronts -may play an important role. In particular, impulse propagation strongly depends on the wavefront curvature on a small spatial scale. In the heart, excitation wavefronts have pronounced curvatures in several situations including waves initiated by small electrodes, waves emerging from narrow tissue structures, and waves propagating around the sharp edges of anatomical obstacles or around a zone of functional conduction block during spiral wave rotation. In this short review we consider the theoretical background relating impulse propagation to wavefront curvature and we estimate the role of wavefront curvature in electrical stimulation, formation of conduction block, and the dynamic behavior of spiral waves.
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Vladimir G. Fast
University of Alabama at Birmingham
André G. Kléber
Electrophysiology
Cardiovascular Research
University of Bern
Universidad Iberoamericana
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Fast et al. (Sat,) conducted a review in Cardiac impulse propagation. Wavefront curvature was evaluated. Wavefront curvature on a small spatial scale plays an important role in cardiac impulse propagation, electrical stimulation, formation of conduction block, and spiral wave dynamics.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a081c221e8b9db648ddf057 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0008-6363(96)00216-7