AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on the unique structure of the right ventricular insertion point (RVIP) in the human heart, which has been less examined compared to the left ventricle.
  • Researchers used advanced imaging techniques on sheep and human hearts to analyze cardiomyocyte organization and identified a distinct triangular region at the RVIP characterized by a sudden change in cell orientation.
  • Findings showed that this region affects the electrical activity of the heart, leading to delayed activation times and altered ECG signals, indicating its importance in understanding heart function and potential arrhythmias.

Article Abstract

Background: While the microstructure of the left ventricle (LV) has been largely described, only a few studies investigated the right ventricular insertion point (RVIP). It was accepted that the aggregate cardiomyocytes organization was much more complex due to the intersection of the ventricular cavities but a precise structural characterization in the human heart was lacking even if clinical phenotypes related to right ventricular wall stress or arrhythmia were observed in this region.

Methods: MRI-derived anatomical imaging (150 µm) and diffusion tensor imaging (600 µm) were performed in large mammalian whole hearts (human: N = 5, sheep: N = 5). Fractional anisotropy, aggregate cardiomyocytes orientations and tractography were compared within both species. Aggregate cardiomyocytes orientation on one ex-vivo sheep whole heart was then computed using structure tensor imaging (STI) from 21 µm isotropic acquisition acquired with micro computed tomography (MicroCT) imaging. Macroscopic and histological examination were performed. Lastly, experimental cardiomyocytes orientation distribution was then compared to the usual rule-based model using electrophysiological (EP) modeling. Electrical activity was modeled with the monodomain formulation.

Results: The RVIP at the level of the inferior ventricular septum presented a unique arrangement of aggregate cardiomyocytes. An abrupt, mid-myocardial change in cardiomyocytes orientation was observed, delimiting a triangle-shaped region, present in both sheep and human hearts. FA's histogram distribution (mean ± std: 0.29 ± 0.06) of the identified region as well as the main dimension (22.2 mm ± 5.6 mm) was found homogeneous across samples and species. Averaged volume is 0.34 cm ± 0.15 cm. Both local activation time (LAT) and morphology of pseudo-ECGs were strongly impacted with delayed LAT and change in peak-to-peak amplitude in the simulated wedge model.

Conclusion: The study was the first to describe the 3D cardiomyocytes architecture of the basal inferoseptal left ventricle region in human hearts and identify the presence of a well-organized aggregate cardiomyocytes arrangement and cardiac structural discontinuities. The results might offer a better appreciation of clinical phenotypes like RVIP-late gadolinium enhancement or uncommon idiopathic ventricular arrhythmias (VA) originating from this region.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10720182PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12968-023-00989-yDOI Listing

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