Abstract

Rotors are functional reentry sources identified in clinically relevant cardiac arrhythmias, such as ventricular and atrial fibrillation. Ablation targeting rotor sites has resulted in arrhythmia termination. Recent clinical, experimental and modelling studies demonstrate that rotors are often anchored around fibrotic scars or regions with increased fibrosis. However, the mechanisms leading to abundance of rotors at these locations are not clear. The current study explores the hypothesis whether fibrotic scars just serve as anchoring sites for the rotors or whether there are other active processes which drive the rotors to these fibrotic regions. Rotors were induced at different distances from fibrotic scars of various sizes and degree of fibrosis. Simulations were performed in a 2D model of human ventricular tissue and in a patient-specific model of the left ventricle of a patient with remote myocardial infarction. In both the 2D and the patient-specific model we found that without fibrotic scars, the rotors were stable at the site of their initiation. However, in the presence of a scar, rotors were eventually dynamically anchored from large distances by the fibrotic scar via a process of dynamical reorganization of the excitation pattern. This process coalesces with a change from polymorphic to monomorphic ventricular tachycardia.

Highlights

  • Many clinically relevant cardiac arrhythmias are conjectured to be organized by rotors

  • Burning the site of a rotor can result in the termination of the arrhythmia

  • Dynamical anchoring of distant arrhythmia sources by fibrotic regions scar in a generic study

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Summary

Introduction

Many clinically relevant cardiac arrhythmias are conjectured to be organized by rotors. Rapid and complex reentry arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillation (AF) and ventricular fibrillation (VF) are thought to be driven by single or multiple rotors. A clinical study by Narayan et al [1] indicated that localized rotors were present in 68% of cases of sustained AF. Rotors (phase singularities) were found in VF induced by burst pacing in patients undergoing cardiac surgery [2, 3] and in VF induced in patients undergoing ablation procedures for ventricular arrhythmias [4]. It was demonstrated that in most cases rotors originate and stabilize in specific locations [4,5,6,7,8]

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