Cardiac anisotropy in boundary-element models for the electrocardiogram

Open Access
Authors
  • M. Potse
  • B. Dubé
  • A. Vinet
Publication date 2009
Journal Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing
Volume | Issue number 47 | 7
Pages (from-to) 719-729
Organisations
  • Faculty of Medicine (AMC-UvA)
Abstract
The boundary-element method (BEM) is widely used for electrocardiogram (ECG) simulation. Its major disadvantage is its perceived inability to deal with the anisotropic electric conductivity of the myocardial interstitium, which led researchers to represent only intracellular anisotropy or neglect anisotropy altogether. We computed ECGs with a BEM model based on dipole sources that accounted for a "compound" anisotropy ratio. The ECGs were compared with those computed by a finite-difference model, in which intracellular and interstitial anisotropy could be represented without compromise. For a given set of conductivities, we always found a compound anisotropy value that led to acceptable differences between BEM and finite-difference results. In contrast, a fully isotropic model produced unacceptably large differences. A model that accounted only for intracellular anisotropy showed intermediate performance. We conclude that using a compound anisotropy ratio allows BEM-based ECG models to more accurately represent both anisotropies.
Document type Article
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/s11517-009-0472-x
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