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Section: Research Program

Complex models for the propagation of cardiac action potentials

The contraction of the heart is coordinated by a complex electrical activation process which relies on about a million ion channels, pumps, and exchangers of various kinds in the membrane of each cardiac cell. Their interaction results in an activation wave that rapidly propagates through the tissue. The spatio-temporal pattern of this propagation is related both to the function of the cellular membrane and to the structural organisation of the cells into tissues. Cardiac arrythmias originate from malfunctions in this process. The field of cardiac electrophysiology studies the multiscale organisation of the cardiac activation process from the subcellular scale up to the scale of the body. It relates the molecular processes in the cell membranes to the propagation process and to measurable signals in the heart and to the electrocardiogram, an electrical signal on the torso.

Several improvements of current models of the propagation of the action potential will be developped, based on previous work and on the data available at the LIRYC:

These models are essential to improve our in-depth understanding of cardiac electrical dysfunction. To this aim, we use high-performance computing techniques in order to numerically explore the complexity of these models and check that they are reliable experimental tools.