Abstract

BackgroundPrecise analysis of cardiac spiral wave (SW) dynamics is essential for effective arrhythmia treatment. Although the phase singularity (PS) point in the spatial phase map has been used to determine the cardiac SW center for decades, quantitative detection algorithms that assume PS as a point fail to trace complex and rapid PS dynamics. Through a detailed analysis of numerical simulations, we examined our hypothesis that a boundary of spatial phase discontinuity induced by a focal conduction block exists around the moving SW center in the phase map. MethodIn a numerical simulation model of a 2D cardiac sheet, three different types of SWs (short wavelength; long wavelength; and low excitability) were induced by regulating ion channels. Discontinuities of all boundaries among adjacent cells at each instance were evaluated by calculating the phase bipolarity (PB). The total amount of phase transition (PTA) in each cell during the study period was evaluated. ResultsPivoting, drifting, and shifting SWs were observed in the short-wavelength, low-excitability, and long-wavelength models, respectively. For both the drifting and shifting cases, long high-PB edges were observed on the SW trajectories. In all cases, the conduction block (CB) was observed at the same boundaries. These were also identical to the boundaries in the PTA maps. ConclusionsThe analysis of the simulations revealed that the conduction block at the center of a moving SW induces discontinuous boundaries in spatial phase maps that represent a more appropriate model of the SW center than the PS point.

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