Abstract

It has been suggested that reentrant activity in three-dimensional cardiac muscle may be organized as a scroll wave rotating around a singularity line called the filament. Experimental studies indicate that filaments are often concealed inside the ventricular wall and consequently, scroll waves do not manifest reentrant activity on the surface. Here we analyse how such concealed scroll waves are affected by a twisted anisotropy resulting from rotation of layers of muscle fibers inside the ventricular wall. We used a computer model of a ventricular slab (15×15×15 mm3) with a fiber twist of 120° from endocardium to epicardium. The action potential was simulated using FitzHugh–Nagumo equations. Scroll waves with rectilinear filaments were initiated at various depths of the slab and at different angles with respect to fiber orientation. The analysis shows that independent of initial conditions, after a certain transitional period, the filament aligns with the local fiber orientation. The alignment of the filament is determined by the directional variations in cell coupling due to fiber rotation and by boundary conditions. Our findings provide a mechanistic explanation for the prevalence of intramural reentry over transmural reentry during polymorphic ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation.

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