Imaging the beating of the heart
A European study investigated how the inherent capacity of the heart to beat relies on its structure. The generated results and tools should prove useful in the diagnosis of pathological heart conditions.
The structure and architecture of the myocardial muscle is central for
its contraction and function. Muscle cells are elongated and are stacked
into sheets. Recent evidence indicates that propagation of the action
potential in the heart ventricles is critically dependent on both muscle
fibre orientation and sheet structure.
It is hypothesised that during contraction, myocardial sheets slide
across each other thereby facilitating the thickening of the myocardium.
However, due to technical limitations, this has yet to be demonstrated
in living tissues.
Advances in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) permit visualisation at
the microscopic level. Using such in vivo cardiac MRI (CMRI),
scientists on the EU-funded MSIA project set out to investigate how
myocardial structure and architecture impacts cardiac excitation and
contraction. They worked with the hypothesis that myocardial sheet
sliding could also affect arrhythmias.
CMRI was performed on two pig models, a sheep ventricular infarction
model and normal subjects. Structural and functional images were
obtained and analysed to reveal that sheet structure affects the pattern
of electrical propagation. These findings also support the idea that
cardiac myolaminar structure develops in order to minimise shearing of
the myocardium upon contraction.
The results of the MSIA study have fuelled future modelling of the
structure of infarcted hearts. It is envisaged that such efforts should
help explain how myocardial functioning changes in pathological
situations.
Delineation of the physiological and anatomical principles of the
cardiac tissue underscores the significance of the heart as a whole
organ in its proper function. In the long term, a better understanding
of cardiac development and function in health and disease should improve
diagnosis of myocardial disease.
published: 2015-03-26