Direct in vivo assessment of global and regional mechanoelectric feedback in the intact human heart.

Heart Rhythm

Electrophysiology Department, Barts Heart Centre at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London, United Kingdom; Institute of Cardiovascular Science, University College London, London, United Kingdom.

Published: August 2021

Background: Inhomogeneity of ventricular contraction is associated with sudden cardiac death, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Alterations in cardiac contraction impact electrophysiological parameters through mechanoelectric feedback. This has been shown to promote arrhythmias in experimental studies, but its effect in the in vivo human heart is unclear.

Objective: The purpose of this study was to quantify the impact of regional myocardial deformation provoked by a sudden increase in ventricular loading (aortic occlusion) on human cardiac electrophysiology.

Methods: In 10 patients undergoing open heart cardiac surgery, left ventricular (LV) afterload was modified by transient aortic occlusion. Simultaneous assessment of whole-heart electrophysiology and LV deformation was performed using an epicardial sock (240 electrodes) and speckle-tracking transesophageal echocardiography. Parameters were matched to 6 American Heart Association LV model segments. The association between changes in regional myocardial segment length and activation-recovery interval (ARI; a conventional surrogate for action potential duration) was studied using mixed-effect models.

Results: Increased ventricular loading reduced longitudinal shortening (P = .01) and shortened ARI (P = .02), but changes were heterogeneous between cardiac segments. Increased regional longitudinal shortening was associated with ARI shortening (effect size 0.20 [0.01-0.38] ms/%; P = .04) and increased local ARI dispersion (effect size -0.13 [-0.23 to -0.03] ms/%; P = .04). At the whole organ level, increased mechanical dispersion translated into increased dispersion of repolarization (correlation coefficient r = 0.81; P = .01).

Conclusion: Mechanoelectric feedback can establish a potentially proarrhythmic substrate in the human heart and should be considered to advance our understanding and prevention of cardiac arrhythmias.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8353585PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hrthm.2021.04.026DOI Listing

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