High resolution magnetic images of planar wave fronts reveal bidomain properties of cardiac tissue

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Abstract

We magnetically imaged the magnetic action field and optically imaged the transmembrane potentials generated by planar wavefronts on the surface of the left ventricular wall of Langendorff-perfused isolated rabbit hearts. The magnetic action field images were used to produce a time series of two-dimensional action current maps. Overlaying epifluorescent images allowed us to identify a net current along the wavefront and perpendicular to gradients in the transmembrane potential. This is in contrast to a traditional uniform double-layer model where the net current flows along the gradient in the transmembrane potential. Our findings are supported by numerical simulations that treat cardiac tissue as a bidomain with unequal anisotropies in the intra- and extracellular spaces. Our measurements reveal the anisotropic bidomain nature of cardiac tissue during plane wave propagation. These bidomain effects play an important role in the generation of the whole-heart magnetocardiogram and cannot be ignored.

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Holzer, J. R., Fong, L. E., Sidorov, V. Y., Wikswo, J. P., & Baudenbacher, F. (2004). High resolution magnetic images of planar wave fronts reveal bidomain properties of cardiac tissue. Biophysical Journal, 87(6), 4326–4332. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.104.049163

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