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Effect of excitation sequence of myocardial contraction on the mechanical response of the left ventricle

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-06-26, 09:29 authored by George Troulliotis, Alison Duncan, Xiao Yun Xu, Alessandro Gandaglia, Fillipo Naso, Hendrik VersteegHendrik Versteeg, Saeed Mirsadraee, Sotiris KorossisSotiris Korossis
In the past two decades there has been rapid development in the field of computational cardiac models. These have included either (i) mechanical models that assumed simultaneous myocardial activation, or (ii) electromechanical models that assumed time-varying myocardial activation. The influence of these modelling assumptions of myocardial activation on clinically relevant metrics, like myocardial strain, commonly used for validation of cardiac models has yet to be systematically examined, leading to uncertainty over their influence on the predictions of these models. This study examined the effects of simultaneous (mechanical), uniform endocardial, 3-patch endocardial (simulating the fascicles of the His-Purkinje system) and 1-patch endocardial (simulating the atrioventricular node) excitation sequences on the mechanical response of a synthetic human left ventricular model. The influence of the duration of the activation and time-to-peak contraction was also investigated. The electromechanical and mechanical models produced different strain distributions in early systole. However, these differences decayed as systole progressed. Using the same activation duration (74 ms) the average peak-systolic circumferential strain difference between the models was 0.65±0.37 %. A slightly prolonged activation duration (134 ms) resulted in no substantial difference increase (0.76±0.47 %). Differences up to 3.5 % were observed for prolonged activation durations (200 ms). Endocardial excitation produced non-physiological cumulative activation time distributions compared to the other models. Septal 1-patch excitation resulted in early systolic strain response that resembled pathological left bundle branch block. Decreased time-to-peak contraction exaggerated the effects of electrophysiology. The study found that excitation sequence minimally affects strain distributions at peak systole for physiological and even slightly pathological activation durations. However, electromechanical models with (patho)physiologically informed activation sequences are important for the accurate prediction of early systolic and pathological late systolic responses.

Funding

The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Royal Brompton and Harefield Hospitals

Biocompatibility Innovation slr

Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering

Published in

Medical Engineering and Physics

Volume

134

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Acceptance date

2024-11-17

Publication date

2024-11-22

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

1350-4533

eISSN

1873-4030

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Sotiris Korossis. Deposit date: 6 June 2025

Article number

104255