ADVANCING THE FRONTS OF CARDIAC RESEARCH
Researchers combine electrostatic analysis and laboratory
experiments to improve technology for arrhythmia treatment
By: Tamara C. Baynham, Stephen B. Knisley
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This view of a rabbit heart shows the directions
of fibers on the surface over which electric current flows.
Regular electric impulses across this surface are vital to
maintaining a healthy, functioning heart. Arrhythmias, which
afflict 4.3 million Americans, result when electric impulses
become abnormal and cause the heart to pump blood less effectively. |
September 4, 1998, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania - If you've
ever listened through a stethoscope to a healthy human heart,
you've probably heard its soft, rhythmic beating. However, for
about 4.3 million Americans who experience arrhythmias, their
heartbeats may be anything but rhythmic, they may even be life
threatening.
Arrhythmias are abnormal rhythms of the heart that cause it to
pump less effectively. Arrhythmias factor into half of all sudden
cardiac deaths in the United States each year. Increased demand
for improved technology for arrhythmia treatment and prevention,
especially electronic implantable devices that apply an electric
shock to the heart, is fueling research at the Cardiac Rhythm
Management Laboratory in the Department of Biomedical Engineering
at The University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Through laboratory testing on rabbit hearts and finite element
models analyzed with software from Pittsburgh, PA-based Algor,
Inc., the researchers have learned how the structure of heart
fibers may affect the application and distribution of an electric
current. The findings of this research will be applied to improve
existing implantable devices to better regulate heart rhythms.
The Beating Heart
A normal healthy heart is about the size of an orange and pumps
thousands of gallons of blood each day through the arteries, veins
and capillaries of the circulatory system. The circulating blood
replenishes all parts of the body with oxygen and nutrients and
removes waste from cells.
The four chambers of the heart, the upper left and right atria
and the lower left and right ventricles, must work in precise
order. A specialized group of cells, called the sinus node, is
located in the right atrium and sends electric impulses at a regular
interval through heart fibers of the atria and ventricles. As
the electric impulse propagates and moves uniformly through the
fibrous membrane of the heart, the heart contracts to pump blood
and then expands as the signal passes. Throughout this contraction/expansion
cycle, the heart exhibits changes in the amount of current or
voltage across its fibers, called transmembrane voltage.
For the heart to function normally, the distribution of the transmembrane
voltage must be approximately uniform throughout the heart. If
the values differ greatly, arrhythmia can occur because the electric
impulses of the heart become disorganized. Heart disease or blocked
arteries are often to blame for this disorganization. For example,
if a main artery becomes blocked, blood flow is stopped to part
of the heart. The heart loses its synchrony because all parts
of the heart no longer function properly and arrhythmia occurs.
Arrhythmias can cause the heart to beat either slower or faster
than the normal rate of 60 to 100 beats per minute. This situation
can lead to a potentially fatal condition called ventricular fibrillation
where the heart quivers rapidly instead of pumping blood. If left
untreated, the patient could die within minutes.
Treatments for Arrhythmia
Treatments vary for each type of arrhythmia. Excessive slowing
of the heart often requires the implantation of an electronic
pacemaker under the skin. Arrhythmias that result in an accelerated
heart rate can be classified as either atrial or ventricular fibrillation.
According to the American Heart Association, atrial fibrillation
causes about 15 percent of strokes per year when blood clots develop
in the atria and move to an artery in the brain. This type of
fibrillation is often treated with medication to prevent clotting.
Ventricular fibrillation, the most serious type of fibrillation,
is involved in a large number of the 250,000 sudden cardiac deaths
in the United States each year. Ventricular fibrillation must
be corrected immediately with electric shock therapy. The restored
cardiac rhythm is maintained with medication or an electronic
device called an automatic implantable cardioverter/defibrillator
(AICD).
In recent years, more physicians have chosen AICDs to prevent
death from fibrillation as studies have proven their effectiveness
to be equal to or better than medications. Furthermore, not all
patients who survive fibrillation can be effectively treated by
drug therapy. Because fibrillation occurs across all age groups,
these devices provide an alternative to lifelong medication and
can improve the overall quality of life.
Common AICDs consist of batteries and a pulse generator insulated
in a flat case, which is inserted under the skin. Insulated metal
wires run from the case through veins to the heart cavity where
electrodes are positioned directly within the heart. Sensor electrodes
automatically detect when the heart is out of rhythm and signal
the pulse generator to send an electric current through an exposed
electrode. Therefore, fibrillation is halted quickly after irregular
rhythms are detected.
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Arrhythmias can be prevented with automatic
implantable cardioverter/defibrillators (AICD), such as the
Ventak (TM) AICD from Guidant Corporation Cardiac Pacemakers,
Inc., St. Paul, Minnesota. Researchers at the Cardiac Rhythm
Management Laboratory in the Department of Biomedical Engineering
at The University of Alabama at Birmingham hope to apply their
research findings to improving the effectiveness of these
devices. |
New Research to Improve Current Technology
Researchers at the Cardiac Rhythm Management Laboratory are working
to improve current AICD technology by exploring better options
for the most effective shapes and positions of electrodes on heart
fibers as well as learning more about the fiber structure of the
heart. Researchers employed Algor's electrostatic finite element
analysis (FEA) software to study the distribution of an electric
current as it flows through the heart. The researchers hoped to
develop techniques that would create a more uniform change in
membrane voltage to more efficiently halt ventricular fibrillation.
Current AICDs contain electrodes that are essentially small cylinders
or the rounded tips of wire leads. Experiments to study how an
electric current affects the heart have been performed with these
small electrodes, called point electrodes. Point electrodes emit
electric current, which spreads radially from the source much
like ripples of water that result when a pebble is dropped into
a pond. However, unlike the smooth surface of a pond, the fibers
of the heart can create resistance to the current causing an uneven
spread of current and a very non-uniform distribution of transmembrane
voltage.
Because of the shape of a point electrode, it cannot be oriented
with respect to the direction of the fibers to reduce resistance.
The researchers hypothesized that, by using a longer line electrode
instead of just a point, an electrode can be positioned either
parallel or perpendicular to heart fibers to best transfer current
and create a more uniform distribution of transmembrane voltage.
A line electrode can be a series of points adjacent to each other
to form a line or an entire segment of exposed wire applied directly
to the heart.
Before the researchers could test this hypothesis, they needed
to determine the density or distribution of the electric current
emitted from a line electrode. Up to this point, classical electrodynamic
theory had only been applied to conventional shapes, such as the
disk-shaped electrode with radial symmetry. From the classical
theory, researchers knew that more current is emitted from the
edge of a disk than from the center. The researchers used Algor's
electrostatic analysis software to determine how much current
would be emitted from each point on the line. It was possible
that more current could have been distributed from the ends of
the electrode than from the middle segment.
The Finite Element Model
The researchers used Algor's Superdraw III, a precision finite
element model-building tool, to model a 100 by 100-cm sheet, which
represented a conductive area of the heart. They applied a resistivity
value based on a thickness of 1 cm to simulate a uniform resistance
over heart fibers. A 3.6 by 3.6-cm central region contained a
1-cm long electrode in the center. Voltage boundary elements were
applied to points on the sheet that were in contact with the electrode.
Smaller two-dimensional planar elements were used around the electrode
to achieve more detailed results in this area of concern and larger
elements were used for outlying areas. Researchers specified that
a voltage of 100 volts be applied at the electrode and that the
voltage would be zero at the perimeter of the sheet. They found
that the values chosen for the voltage and resistivity values
affected the total current values, but did not affect how the
current was distributed along the electrode.
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Researchers used design and analysis software
from Pittsburgh, PA-based Algor, Inc. to model and analyze
the current distribution across heart fibers. This model shows
electric current dissipating over a conductive sheet that
corresponds to the surface of the heart. The inset shows the
voltage across a 3.6 by 3.6-cm central region containing a
line electrode.
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The finite element model showed that current through the element
faces at the ends of the electrodes was 151 percent larger than
current near the electrode center. The researchers ran another
electrostatic analysis to determine if the same effect would occur
with a coarser mesh. These results indicated only a 113 percent
increase near the electrode ends compared to the electrode center.
This agrees with theory where the increase at ends is greater
with a finer mesh and smaller with a coarser mesh. The researchers
were able to show that the ends of a line electrode emit a higher
concentration of current -- similar to that previously known for
the edge of a disk electrode.
The researchers also used FEA to determine that the length of
the line electrode does not affect the current distribution. Another
finite element model was constructed with a 3 mm-long electrode
located at the center. The analysis results indicated that the
percentage of current coming from regions near the electrode ends
made up about 50 percent of the total current regardless of electrode
length.
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This model shows the distribution of total
electric current in the central area near the line electrode.
Current through the element faces at the ends of the electrodes
was larger than that near the electrode center.
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Confirming FEA with Laboratory Testing
To confirm the results of the analysis and further test the positioning
of the electrode with respect to heart fibers, the researchers
applied line electrodes in varying positions and orientations
on 13 hearts from New Zealand rabbits. The researchers used line
electrodes comprised of a series of points applied adjacent to
each other since the sum of the current from all points would
correspond to current from a line. Rabbit hearts were chosen because
their fibrous structure is similar to human hearts. Furthermore,
they are smaller in size, comparable to that of a small peach.
Smaller hearts are more feasible to study because of the small
amount of artificial blood needed to keep them "alive."
The researchers began by applying line electrodes parallel to
heart fibers to determine if the changes in transmembrane voltage
of the fibers would become more uniform, as was hypothesized.
As described previously, producing an efficient change of voltage
from very irregular to uniform is vital to restoring regular heart
rhythms.
The magnitude of changes in transmembrane voltage on either side
of the electrode remained constant or increased in the central
region for the first few millimeters away from the electrode and
then began to decrease. The most significant changes in magnitude
of transmembrane voltage occurred at the electrode ends. This
finding correlates with the results of the electrostatic analysis,
which showed a high concentration of current distribution in this
area. A region near the center of the electrode experienced a
negligible change in transmembrane voltage. The changes in transmembrane
voltage had the same sign (i.e., were more uniform) when the line
electrodes were parallel to heart fibers.
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When researchers applied the line electrode
parallel to the direction of the heart fibers, the change
in transmembrane voltage across the fibers was more uniform,
as indicated by the large blue area. Orange areas indicate
areas of zero change. A more uniform change in voltage keeps
the heart stable and at low risk for arrhythmia.
The line electrode aligned perpendicular to fibers
resulted in a less uniform change in transmembrane voltage.
Thin strips of orange indicate no change while the large
pockets of red on both sides of the electrode indicate an
adverse change, opposite of that needed for the transmembrane
voltage to become uniform across the heart. These findings
show that by orienting line electrodes parallel to heart
fibers, physicians may be able to treat and prevent arrhythmias
more efficiently and effectively than previous practices.
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Next, the researchers oriented the line electrode perpendicular
to heart fibers. The results indicated that the change in transmembrane
voltage was less uniform across the fibers. Notably, the change
in transmembrane voltage had different signs. Regions of small
changes in voltage were detected 4 mm away from and on either
side of the approximate center of the electrode.
Applications for Line Electrode Research
The research showed that the parallel orientation of a line electrode
to heart fibers enhances the uniformity of the change in transmembrane
voltage. Therefore, the application of a line electrode, instead
of a point electrode, parallel to fibers enables better control
over the distribution of the responses by the fibers to the application
of electric current. This means that the change in transmembrane
voltage would be more uniform and homogenous, closer to that of
a normally functioning heart. This knowledge could be applied
to future types of AICDs to regionally block the areas of the
heart from becoming out of synch and prone to fibrillation.
Furthermore, line electrodes may play an important role in developing
new, less invasive therapies for arrhythmias. This includes inserting
line electrodes in the heart through the cardiac veins for therapeutic
treatment. This method may increase the efficiency with which
electric current is applied to the heart by distributing current
from several electrodes. Furthermore, it is less traumatic than
some previous methods used that required surgical procedures to
open the chest.
Finally, the researchers were able to determine the distribution
of the change in transmembrane voltage from a line electrode,
made up of a summation of points, using electrostatic analysis.
In the future, electrodes of other shapes can be studied using
FEA to determine potential advantages of new types of electrode
configuration.
With the prevalence of heart disease, arrhythmias and sudden death
due to heart problems, it is important to learn more about the
structure of the heart and its responsiveness to both electric
current therapies and medications. This knowledge will help arrhythmia
victims, both young and old, live longer and have more productive
lives.
This research was supported by the National Institutes
of Health Grant HL52003 and American Heart Association Grants
AL 950032 and 9740173N. Ms. Baynham is a Ph.D. student in the
Department of Biomedical Engineering at The University of Alabama
at Birmingham. Her research interests include electrical stimulation
and arrhythmia research. Dr. Knisley is an Established Investigator
Awardee of the American Heart Association.
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