Electrostriction Effects During Defibrillation
Michelle M. Fritz, Phil W. Prior, Bradley J. Roth

TL;DR
This paper investigates the physical mechanisms of electrostriction-induced deformation in the heart during defibrillation, revealing that tissue anisotropy influences the deformation pattern and magnitude, which may be relevant for imaging and understanding defibrillation effects.
Contribution
It provides an analytical model of heart deformation during defibrillation considering tissue anisotropy, highlighting the physical origin and magnitude of electrostrictive forces.
Findings
Deformation caused by electrostriction is small but potentially detectable.
Anisotropy suppresses radial displacements, favoring tangential ones.
Charge distribution and forces depend on tissue anisotropy and electric field strength.
Abstract
Background-The electric field applied to the heart during defibrillation causes mechanical forces (electrostriction), and as a result the heart deforms. This paper analyses the physical origin of the deformation, and how significant it is. Methods-We represent the heart as an anisotropic cylinder. This simple geometry allows us to obtain analytical solutions for the potential, current density, charge, stress, and strain. Results-Charge induced on the heart surface in the presence of the electric field results in forces that deform the heart. In addition, the anisotropy of cardiac tissue creates a charge density throughout the tissue volume, leading to body forces. These two forces cause the tissue to deform in a complicated manner, with the anisotropy suppressing radial displacements in favor of tangential ones. Quantitatively, the deformation of the tissue is small, although it may be…
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