Spatiotemporal Organization of Electromechanical Phase Singularities during High-Frequency Cardiac Arrhythmias
A. Molavi Tabrizi, A. Mesgarnejad, M. Bazzi, S. Luther, J. Christoph,, and A. Karma

TL;DR
This study investigates the spatiotemporal organization of electromechanical phase singularities during high-frequency cardiac arrhythmias, revealing the existence of paired and unpaired mechanical phase singularities and their relation to electrical activity.
Contribution
It uncovers the fundamental nature of mechanical phase singularities, their types, and their origins, advancing understanding of electromechanical dynamics in cardiac fibrillation.
Findings
Identified two types of mechanical phase singularities: paired and unpaired.
Unpaired singularities arise from tissue anisotropy and elastic interactions, independent of electrical phase singularities.
Developed a method to distinguish between paired and unpaired mechanical phase singularities.
Abstract
Ventricular fibrillation (VF) is a lifethreatening electromechanical dysfunction of the heart associated with complex spatiotemporal dynamics of electrical excitation and mechanical contraction of the heart muscle. It has been hypothesized that VF is driven by three-dimensional (3D) rotating electrical scroll waves, which can be characterized by filament-like electrical phase singularities (EPS). Recently, it was shown that rotating excitation waves during VF are associated with rotating waves of mechanical deformation. 3D mechanical scroll waves and mechanical filaments describing their rotational core were observed in the ventricles by using high-resolution ultrasound. The findings suggest that the spatiotemporal organization of cardiac fibrillation may be assessed from waves of mechanical deformation. However, the complex relationship between excitation and mechanical waves during VF…
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