On the nature of delays allowing anatomical re-entry involving the Purkinje network: a simulation study

Europace. 2021 Mar 4;23(23 Suppl 1):i71-i79. doi: 10.1093/europace/euaa395.

Abstract

Aims: Clinical observations suggest that the Purkinje network can be part of anatomical re-entry circuits in monomorphic or polymorphic ventricular arrhythmias. However, significant conduction delay is needed to support anatomical re-entry given the high conduction velocity within the Purkinje network.

Methods and results: We investigated, in computer models, whether damage rendering the Purkinje network as either an active lesion with slow conduction or a passive lesion with no excitable ionic channel, could explain clinical observations. Active lesions had compromised sodium current and a severe reduction in gap junction coupling, while passive lesions remained coupled by gap junctions, but modelled the membrane as a fixed resistance. Both types of tissue could provide significant delays of over 100 ms. Electrograms consistent with those obtained clinically were reproduced. However, passive tissue could not support re-entry as electrotonic coupling across the delay effectively increased the proximal refractory period to an extremely long interval. Active tissue, conversely, could robustly maintain re-entry.

Conclusion: Formation of anatomical re-entry using the Purkinje network is possible through highly reduced gap junctional coupling leading to slowed conduction.

Keywords: Computer modelling; Purkinje system; Ventricular arrhythmia.

MeSH terms

  • Arrhythmias, Cardiac*
  • Computer Simulation
  • Humans
  • Purkinje Fibers*