PubMed 12193467
Referenced in: none
Automatically associated channels: Kir6.2
Title: Life span of ventricular fibrillation frequencies.
Authors: Bum-Rak Choi, Wonchul Nho, Tong Liu, Guy Salama
Journal, date & volume: Circ. Res., 2002 Aug 23 , 91, 339-45
PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12193467
Abstract
The nature and organization of electrical activity during ventricular fibrillation (VF) are important and controversial subjects dominated by 2 competing theories: the wavebreak and the dominant mother rotor hypothesis. To investigate spatiotemporal characteristics of ventricular fibrillation (VF), transmembrane potentials (V(m)) were recorded from multiple sites of perfused rabbit hearts using a voltage-sensitive dye and a photodiode array or a CCD camera, and the time-frequency characteristics of V(m) were analyzed by short-time fast Fourier transform (FFT) or generalized time-frequency representation with a cone-shaped kernel. The analysis was applied to all pixels to track VF frequencies in time and space. VF consisted of blobs, which are groups of contiguous pixels with a common frequency and an ill-defined shape. At any time t, several VF frequency blobs coexisted in the field of view, and the number of coexisting blobs was on average 5.9+/-2.1 (n=8 hearts) as they appeared and disappeared discontinuously with time and were not fixed in space. The life span of frequency blobs from birth to either annihilation or breakup to another frequency had a half-life of 0.39+/-0.13 second (n=4 hearts). The Ca2+ channel blocker nifedipine increased the stability of VF frequencies and reduced the number of frequency blobs progressing to a single frequency. In conclusion, VF consists of dynamically changing frequency blobs, which have a short life span and can be modified by pharmacological interventions, suggesting that VF is maintained by dynamically changing multiple wavelets.