Abstract

Abstract Background Myocardial infarction (MI) results in altered mechanical loading and changes in the cardiac electrical properties. The infarct border zone is pro-arrhythmic but the exact role of mechano-electrical coupling remains unclear. Objective We studied spatial electrical heterogeneity in MI animals during acute afterload increase using a novel E-field methodology for high resolution mapping of local activation-repolarization intervals (ARI) in vivo. Methods Anterior-septal MI was induced in five domestic pigs by 120-minute occlusion of the left anterior descending artery followed by reperfusion. This led to an infarct size of 17.7±2.1% of the left ventricle. After 1 month, electro-anatomical mapping was performed before and during an acute afterload challenge induced by partially inflating a balloon in the descending aorta. A non-contact recording of a 64-electrode array was translated to 2048 non-contact electrograms distributed over the left ventricle. The non-contact electrograms were processed to determine the ARIs using a custom-made algorithm, previously validated against monophasic action potential recordings. Based on the contact map we defined border zone (BZ, voltage 0.5 to 1.5 mV) and remote (>1.5mV) regions. Heterogeneity was defined as the interquartile range (IQR) of ARIs in fixed neighborhoods of 1cm radius (figure 1A) and analyzed in 10 segments (5 BZ and 5 remote) of a modified version of the AHA model (49 segments by dividing the 16 non-apical segments). Other segments were discarded due to artefacts mainly caused by the array touching the septal and apical wall. Results Acute afterload challenge resulted in an increase of the systolic left ventricular pressure of 41.7±5.4% and increased left ventricular repolarization heterogeneity (IQR 4.03±1.23ms baseline to 4.85±1.38ms during inflation, p=0.004). There was a significant increase in heterogeneity in both BZ (4.78±1.60ms to 5.64±1.66ms, p=0.020) and remote (2.24±0.17ms to 3.00±0.86ms, p=0.034) regions (figure 1B). The IQR in the infarct BZ was higher compared to the remote zone at rest (4.78±1.60ms vs 2.24±0.17ms, p=0.010) as well as during inflation (5.64±1.66ms vs 3.00±0.86ms, p=0.008) (figure 1B). Both BZ and remote regions responded equally to acute afterload (p for interaction = 0.803). Conclusion Increased afterload leads to increased repolarization heterogeneity. This heterogeneity is higher in the infarct BZ. These alterations could provide a functional substrate for reentry. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: Public Institution(s). Main funding source(s): KU Leuven - C1 funding

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