(Press-News.org) The small size and abnormal anatomy of children born with heart defects often force doctors to place lifesaving defibrillators entirely outside the heart, rather than partly inside — a less-than-ideal solution to dangerous heart rhythms that involves a degree of guesstimating and can compromise therapy.
Now, by marrying simple MRI images with sophisticated computer analysis, a team of Johns Hopkins researchers says it may be possible to take the guesswork out of the process by using a virtual 3-D heart model that analyzes a child's unique anatomy and pinpoints the best location for the device before it is implanted.
A description of the team's work is published ahead of print in The Journal of Physiology.
"Pediatric cardiologists have long sought a way to optimize device placement in this group of cardiac patients, and we believe our model does just that," says lead investigator Natalia Trayanova, Ph.D., the Murray B. Sachs Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins. "It is a critical first step toward bringing computational analysis to the pediatric cardiology clinic."
If further studies show the model has value in patients, it could spare many children with heart disease from repeat procedures that are sometimes needed to re-position the device, says co-investigator Jane Crosson, M.D., a pediatric cardiologist and arrhythmia specialist at the Johns Hopkins Children's Center.
"It's like having a virtual electrophysiology lab where we can predict best outcomes before we even touch the patient," Crosson says.
In adults and in children with normal size and heart anatomy, one part of the device lies under the collar bone, while the other end is inserted into one of the heart's
chambers, a standard and well-tested configuration. But in children with tiny or malformed hearts, the entire device has to be positioned externally, an often imperfect setup. Such less-than-precisely positioned defibrillators can fire unnecessarily or, worse, fail to fire when needed to shock a child's heart back into normal rhythm, experts say. In addition, devices that are not positioned well can pack a punch, delivering ultra-strong, painful jolts that frighten children and could even damage heart cells.
"These are lifesaving devices but they can feel like a horse kick to the chest and really traumatize children," Crosson says.
With the Johns Hopkins heart model, scientists say they can find exactly where in relation to a patient's heart the device would be best able to reset the heart by using the least amount of energy and gentlest shock. This translates into longer battery life for the device as well, Trayanova says.
To build the model, the Johns Hopkins team started out with simple, low-resolution MRI heart scans of a child born without a tricuspid valve and right ventricle. Based on these images, the researchers developed a 3-D computer model that allowed them to simulate a dangerous rhythm disturbance during which the heart's strong, regular beats degenerate into weak quivers that, if uninterrupted, could kill in minutes. The model predicted how effectively the defibrillator would terminate this dangerous rhythm when located in each one of 11 positions around the heart. Based on the model, the scientists determined that two particular positions rendered therapy optimal.
A particular advantage of the model is its true-to-life complexity. The model was built using digital representations of the heart's subcellular, cellular, muscular and connective structures — from ions and cardiac proteins to muscle fiber and tissue. The computer model also included the bones, fat and lungs that surround the heart.
"Heart function is astounding in its complexity and person-to-person variability, and subtle shifts in how one protein interacts with another may have profound consequences on its pumping and electric function," Trayanova says. "We wanted to capture that level of specificity to ensure predictive accuracy."
Trayanova and her team also have designed image-based models that pinpoint arrhythmia-triggering hot spots in the adult heart muscle and can help guide therapeutic ablation of such areas. The new pediatric virtual heart, however, is the team's first foray into pediatric cardiology.
###
Co-investigators on the research included Lukas Ratner, Fijoy Vadakkumpadan and Philip Spevak, all of Johns Hopkins.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health under grant number R01HL103428.
Related on the Web:
She's Got the Beat
http://eng.jhu.edu/wse/magazine-summer-13/item/shes-got-the-beat/
Mapping the Heart
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news/publications/dome/dome_may_2013/mapping_the_heart_
Computational Cardiology Lab
http://www.jhu.edu/trayanova/
Young Athlete's Sudden Death May Warrant Checkups for the Entire Family
https://www.hopkinschildrens.org/Young-Athletes-Sudden-Death-May-Warrant-Checkups-for-the-Entire-Family.aspx
Preventing Cardiac Sudden Death in Young Athletes
http://www.hopkinschildrens.org/Preventing-Cardiac-Sudden-Death-in-Young-Athletes.aspx
Media Contacts: Ekaterina Pesheva, epeshev1@jhmi.edu, (410) 502-9433
Phil Sneiderman, prs@jhu.edu, (443) 287-9907
Shawna Williams, shawna@jhmi.edu, (410) 955-8236
'Virtual heart' precision-guides defibrillator placement in children with heart disease
2013-08-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Brain circuit can tune anxiety
2013-08-21
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Anxiety disorders, which include posttraumatic stress disorder, social phobias and obsessive-compulsive disorder, affect 40 million American adults in a given year. Currently available treatments, such as antianxiety drugs, are not always effective and have unwanted side effects.
To develop better treatments, a more specific understanding of the brain circuits that produce anxiety is necessary, says Kay Tye, an assistant professor of brain and cognitive sciences and member of MIT's Picower Institute for Learning and Memory.
"The targets that current ...
MERS virus discovered in bat near site of outbreak in Saudi Arabia
2013-08-21
A 100% genetic match for Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) has been discovered in an insect-eating bat in close proximity to the first known case of the disease in Saudi Arabia. The discovery points to the likely animal origin for the disease, although researchers say that an intermediary animal is likely also involved.
Led by team of investigators from the Center for Infection and Immunity (CII) at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, EcoHealth Alliance, and the Ministry of Health of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the study is the first to search ...
The bitter and the sweet: Fruit flies reveal a new interaction between the 2
2013-08-21
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Fruit flies have a lot to teach us about the complexity of food. Like these tiny little creatures, most animals are attracted to sugar but are deterred from eating it when bitter compounds are added.
A new study conducted by UC Santa Barbara's Craig Montell, Duggan Professor of Neuroscience in the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, explains a breakthrough in understanding how sensory input impacts fruit flies' decisions about sweet taste. The findings were published today in the journal Neuron.
It is generally well ...
Infection during newborn's first week of life associated with bacterial infection in the mother
2013-08-21
Infection during a newborn's first 7 days of life is associated with bacterial infection or colonization in the mother
Early-onset neonatal infection, defined as infection in the first 7 days of life, is associated with maternal infection and colonization, a systematic review and meta-analysis by Grace Chan (Johns Hopkins School of Public Health) and colleagues found in this week's issue of PLOS Medicine.
Newborns of mothers with laboratory-confirmed infection had an odds ratio of 6.6 (95%CI 3.9-11.2) for laboratory-confirmed infection themselves compared with newborns ...
Guideline development for non-specialist mental health services in Nigeria
2013-08-21
Mental health conditions contribute to approximately 14% of the total global burden of disease but there is a substantial treatment gap in both developed and developing countries. Treatment of mental health conditions in low resource settings such as Nigeria, one of Africa's most populous countries, is particularly challenging where that are few mental health professionals. For example Nigeria has a population of ~150 million but only 0.06 psychiatrists and 0.02 psychologists per 100,000 people.
In order to address the treatment gap the World Health Organization (WHO) ...
Human foot not as unique as originally thought
2013-08-21
Research at the University of Liverpool has shown that the mechanisms of the human foot are not as unique as originally thought and have much more in common with the flexible feet of other great apes.
Current understanding of the evolution of human walking is based on research from the 1930s, which proposes that human feet function very differently to those of other apes, due to the development of arches in the mid-foot region and the supposed rigidity of that on the outside edge of the foot.
In a study of more than 25,000 human steps made on a pressure-sensitive treadmill ...
Large-scale Kaiser Permanente program linked to improved blood pressure control
2013-08-21
OAKLAND, Calif., August 20, 2013 — Kaiser Permanente Northern California nearly doubled the rate of blood pressure control among adult members with diagnosed hypertension between 2001 and 2009 through one of the largest, community-based hypertension programs in the nation, as reported today in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The rate of hypertension control throughout Kaiser Permanente Northern California increased from 43.6 in 2001 to 80.4 percent in 2009, as measured by the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set quality measurement set by ...
Hypertension improvement program associated with increase in blood pressure control rates
2013-08-21
Implementation of a large-scale hypertension program that included evidence-based guidelines and development and sharing of performance metrics was associated with a near-doubling of hypertension control between 2001 and 2009, compared to only modest improvements in state and national control rates, according to a study in the August 21 issue of JAMA.
"Hypertension affects 65 million adults in the United States (29 percent) and is a major contributor to cardiovascular disease. Although effective therapies have been available for more than 50 years, fewer than half of ...
Higher urinary albumin excretion linked with increased risk of CHD among black adults
2013-08-21
In a large national study, higher levels of the urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio was associated with greater risk of incident but not recurrent coronary heart disease in black individuals when compared with white individuals, according to a study in the August 21 issue of JAMA.
"Increased urinary albumin excretion is an important marker of kidney injury and a strong risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Black individuals have higher levels of urinary albumin excretion than white individuals, which may contribute to racial disparities in cardiovascular outcomes," ...
Lateral wedge insoles not associated with improvement of knee pain in osteoarthritis
2013-08-21
Although a pooling of data from 12 studies showed a statistically significant association between use of lateral wedge insoles and lower pain in medial knee osteoarthritis, among trials comparing wedge insoles with neutral insoles, there was no significant or clinically important association between use of wedge insoles and reduction in knee pain, according to a study in the August 21 issue of JAMA.
"Osteoarthritis of the knee is a common painful chronic disease whose prevalence is increasing and for which there are few efficacious treatment options. The increase in ...