Elimination of spiral waves in cardiac tissue by multiple electrical shocks
Publication date
1999-09-28
Authors
Panfilov, A.V.
Müller, Stefan C.
Zykov, Vladimir S.
Keener, James P.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
We study numerically the elimination of a spiral wave in cardiac tissue by application of multiple shocks of
external current. To account for the effect of shocks we apply a recently developed theory for the interaction
of the external current with cardiac tissue. We compare two possible feedback algorithms for timing of the
shocks: a "local" feedback algorithm (using an external electrode placed directly on the tissue) and a
"global" feedback algorithm (using the electrocardiogram). Our main results are: application of the
external current causes a parametric resonant drift similar to that reported in previous model computations; the
ratio of the threshold of elimination of the spiral wave by multiple shocks to the threshold of conventional
single shock defibrillation in our model for cardiac tissue is about 0.5, while earlier, less realistic models
predicted the value about 0.2; we show that an important factor for successful defibrillation is the location of
the feedback electrode and the best results are achieved if the feedback electrode or the ECG lead is located at
the boundary (or edge) of the cardiac tissue; the "local" and the "global" feedback algorithms show similar
efficiency.