Tipping the scales of understanding: An engineering approach to design and implement whole-body cardiac electrophysiology experimental models

The study of cardiac electrophysiology is built on experimental models that span all scales, from ion channels to whole-body preparations. Novel discoveries made at each scale have contributed to our fundamental understanding of human cardiac electrophysiology, which informs clinicians as they detec...

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Published inFrontiers in physiology Vol. 14; p. 1100471
Main Authors Zenger, Brian, Bergquist, Jake A., Busatto, Anna, Good, Wilson W., Rupp, Lindsay C., Sharma, Vikas, MacLeod, Rob S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 19.01.2023
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ISSN1664-042X
1664-042X
DOI10.3389/fphys.2023.1100471

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Summary:The study of cardiac electrophysiology is built on experimental models that span all scales, from ion channels to whole-body preparations. Novel discoveries made at each scale have contributed to our fundamental understanding of human cardiac electrophysiology, which informs clinicians as they detect, diagnose, and treat complex cardiac pathologies. This expert review describes an engineering approach to developing experimental models that is applicable across scales. The review also outlines how we applied the approach to create a set of multiscale whole-body experimental models of cardiac electrophysiology, models that are driving new insights into the response of the myocardium to acute ischemia. Specifically, we propose that researchers must address three critical requirements to develop an effective experimental model: 1) how the experimental model replicates and maintains human physiological conditions, 2) how the interventions possible with the experimental model capture human pathophysiology, and 3) what signals need to be measured, at which levels of resolution and fidelity, and what are the resulting requirements of the measurement system and the access to the organs of interest. We will discuss these requirements in the context of two examples of whole-body experimental models, a closed chest in situ model of cardiac ischemia and an isolated-heart, torso-tank preparation, both of which we have developed over decades and used to gather valuable insights from hundreds of experiments.
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This article was submitted to Cardiac Electrophysiology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Physiology
Edited by: Ruben Coronel, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Reviewed by: Matthijs Cluitmans, Maastricht University, Netherlands
Jason D. Bayer, Université de Bordeaux, France
ISSN:1664-042X
1664-042X
DOI:10.3389/fphys.2023.1100471