Using a new 3D X-ray technique, researchers from University of Liverpool
have managed to identify tissue fibers in the heart that make sure that
the heart muscles beat in a regular rhythm.
The new 3D images could further understanding of how the body's
heartbeat can be disturbed, which may help medics develop ways to reduce
the risk of fibrillation – a condition in which heart muscle contracts
chaotically and fails to pump blood rhythmically around the body.
The heart needs to pump blood in a regular rhythm to maintain a steady
circulation of blood to all parts of the body. It does this through the
coordinated action of the muscle tissue, that pumps the blood, and the
conducting tissue, which is necessary to distribute an electrical wave
to trigger every heartbeat. Until now scientists have been unable to
produce high resolution 3D images of the conducting tissue to fully
identify the network that controls heart rhythm.
The team at Liverpool used a micro CT scanner to image hearts that had
been treated with iodine to highlight the different parts of the tissue.
They found that the solution was absorbed less significantly by the
conducting parts of the heart compared to the muscular parts of the
organ, allowing scientists to clearly identify the areas that produce
electrical activity on the resulting 3D image.
Dr Jonathan Jarvis, from the University's Institute of Ageing and
Chronic Disease, said: "These new anatomically-detailed images could
improve the accuracy of future computer models of the heart and help us
understand how normal and abnormal heart rhythms are generated. 3D
imaging will give us a more thorough knowledge of the cardiac conduction
system, and the way it changes in heart disease.
"Computer models based on these high-fidelity images will help us to
understand why the heart rhythm is vulnerable to changes in heart size,
blood supply, or scarring after a heart attack. One of the major
concerns for surgeons in repairing malformed hearts, for example, is to
avoid damage to the tissue that distributes electrical waves. If they
had access to 3D images of the conducting tissues in malformed hearts,
however, it could be possible to understand where the conducting tissue
is likely to be before they operate."
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