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Lower diastolic tension may be indicative of higher proarrhythmic propensity in failing human cardiomyocytes

Xin Zhou‚ Paul Levesque‚ Khuram Chaudhary‚ Myrtle Davis and Blanca Rodriguez

Abstract

Chronic heart failure is one of the most common reasons for hospitalization. Current risk stratification is based on ejection fraction, whereas many arrhythmic events occur in patients with relatively preserved ejection fraction. We aim to investigate the mechanistic link between proarrhythmic abnormalities, reduced contractility and diastolic dysfunction in heart failure, using electromechanical modelling and simulations of human failing cardiomyocytes. We constructed, calibrated and validated populations of human electromechanical models of failing cardiomyocytes, that were able to reproduce the prolonged action potential, reduced contractility and diastolic dysfunction as observed in human data, as well as increased propensity to proarrhythmic incidents such as early afterdepolarization and beat-to-beat alternans. Our simulation data reveal that proarrhythmic incidents tend to occur in failing myocytes with lower diastolic tension, rather than with lower contractility, due to the relative preserved SERCA and sodium calcium exchanger current. These results support the inclusion of end-diastolic volume to be potentially beneficial in the risk stratifications of heart failure patients.

Copyright
2024 The Author(s)
ISSN
2045−2322
Journal
Scientific Reports
Keywords
Ventricular tachycardia‚ Computational models
Language
en
Month
jul
Note
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Number
1
Pages
17351
Volume
14
Year
2024