Jalife Jose, Gray Richard A., Morley Gregory E., Davidenko Jorge M.
Department of Pharmacology, SUNY Health Science Center at Syracuse, Syracuse, New York 13210.
Chaos. 1998 Mar;8(1):79-93. doi: 10.1063/1.166289.
This article reviews recent data supporting the conjecture that, in the structurally and electrophysiologically normal heart, cardiac fibrillation is not a totally random phenomenon. Experimental and numerical studies based on the theory of excitable media suggest that fibrillation in the mammalian ventricles is the result of self-organized three-dimensional (3-D) electrical rotors giving rise to scroll waves that move continuously (i.e., drift) throughout the heart at varying speeds. A brief review of studies on the dynamics of rotors in two-dimensional (2-D) and 3-D excitable media is presented with emphasis on the experimental demonstration of such dynamics in cardiac muscle of various species. The discussion is centered on rotor dynamics in the presence and the absence of structural heterogeneities, and in the phenomena of drifting and anchoring, which in the electrocardiogram (ECG) may manifest as life-threatening cardiac rhythm disturbances. For instance, in the rabbit heart, a single electrical rotor that drifts rapidly throughout the ventricles gives rise to complex patterns of excitation. In the ECG such patterns are indistinguishable from ventricular fibrillation. On the other hand, a rotor that anchors to a discontinuity or defect in the muscle (e.g., a scar, a large artery or a bundle of connective tissue) may result in stationary rotating activity, which in the ECG is manifested as a form of so-called "monomorphic" ventricular tachycardia. More recent data show that ventricular fibrillation occurs in mammals irrespective of size or species. While in small hearts, such as those of mice and rabbits, a single drifting or meandering rotor can result in fibrillation, in larger hearts, such as the sheep and possibly the human, fibrillation occurs in the form of a relatively small number of coexisting but short-lived rotors. Overall, the work discussed here has paved the way for a better understanding of the mechanisms of fibrillation in the normal, as well as diseased human heart. (c) 1998 American Institute of Physics.
本文回顾了近期的数据,这些数据支持了这样一种推测:在结构和电生理正常的心脏中,心脏颤动并非完全随机的现象。基于可兴奋介质理论的实验和数值研究表明,哺乳动物心室中的颤动是自组织三维(3-D)电转子的结果,这些电转子产生涡旋波,以不同速度在心脏中持续移动(即漂移)。本文简要回顾了二维(2-D)和三维(3-D)可兴奋介质中转子动力学的研究,重点是在各种物种心肌中此类动力学的实验证明。讨论集中在存在和不存在结构异质性情况下的转子动力学,以及漂移和锚定现象,这些现象在心电图(ECG)中可能表现为危及生命的心律失常。例如,在兔心脏中,单个快速在心室中漂移的电转子会产生复杂的兴奋模式。在心电图中,这些模式与心室颤动无法区分。另一方面,一个锚定在肌肉中的不连续处或缺陷处(例如疤痕、大动脉或结缔组织束)的转子可能导致静止的旋转活动,在心电图中表现为所谓的“单形性”室性心动过速。最新数据表明,哺乳动物无论大小或物种都会发生心室颤动。在小鼠和兔子等小心脏中,单个漂移或蜿蜒的转子可导致颤动,而在绵羊以及可能在人类等较大心脏中,颤动以相对少量共存但短暂存在的转子形式发生。总体而言,本文讨论的工作为更好地理解正常以及患病人类心脏中颤动的机制铺平了道路。(c)1998美国物理研究所。