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Mechano‐electrical interactions and heterogeneities in wild‐type and drug‐induced long QT syndrome rabbits

Lewetag, Raphaela D.; Nimani, Saranda; Alerni, Nicolò; Hornyik, Tibor; Jacobi, Simon F.; Moss, Robin; Menza, Marius; Pilia, Nicolas 1; Walz, Teo P.; HajiRassouliha, Amir; Perez-Feliz, Stefanie; Zehender, Manfred; Seemann, Gunnar; Zgierski-Johnston, Callum M.; Lopez, Ruben; Odening, Katja E.
1 Institut für Biomedizinische Technik (IBT), Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT)

Abstract:

Electromechanical reciprocity – comprising electro-mechanical (EMC) and mechano-electric coupling (MEC) – provides cardiac adaptation to changing physiological demands. Understanding electromechanical reciprocity and its impact on function and heterogeneity in pathological conditions – such as (drug-induced) acquired long QT syndrome (aLQTS) – might lead to novel insights in arrhythmogenesis. Our aim is to investigate how electrical changes impact on mechanical function (EMC) and vice versa (MEC) under physiological conditions and in aLQTS. To measure regional differences in EMC and MEC in vivo, we used tissue phase mapping cardiac MRI and a 24-lead ECG vest in healthy (control) and IKr-blocker E-4031-induced aLQTS rabbit hearts. MEC was studied in vivo by acutely increasing cardiac preload, and ex vivo by using voltage optical mapping (OM) in beating hearts at different preloads. In aLQTS, electrical repolarization (heart rate corrected RT-interval, RTn370) was prolonged compared to control (P < 0.0001) with increased spatial and temporal RT heterogeneity (P < 0.01). Changing electrical function (in aLQTS) resulted in significantly reduced diastolic mechanical function and prolonged contraction duration (EMC), causing increased apico-basal mechanical heterogeneity. ... mehr


Verlagsausgabe §
DOI: 10.5445/IR/1000159083
Veröffentlicht am 21.06.2023
Originalveröffentlichung
DOI: 10.1113/JP284604
Scopus
Zitationen: 2
Web of Science
Zitationen: 1
Dimensions
Zitationen: 1
Cover der Publikation
Zugehörige Institution(en) am KIT Institut für Biomedizinische Technik (IBT)
Publikationstyp Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Publikationsmonat/-jahr 09.2024
Sprache Englisch
Identifikator ISSN: 0022-3751, 1469-7793
KITopen-ID: 1000159083
Erschienen in The Journal of Physiology
Verlag John Wiley and Sons
Band 602
Heft 18
Seiten 4511–4527
Nachgewiesen in Dimensions
Web of Science
Scopus
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