scholarly journals Spiral waves within a bistability parameter region of an excitable medium

Author(s):  
Vladimir Zykov ◽  
Eberhard Bodenschatz

Abstract Spiral waves are a well-known and intensively studied dynamic phenomenon in excitable media of various types. Most studies have considered an excitable medium with a single stable resting state. However, spiral waves can be maintained in an excitable medium with bistability. Our calculations, performed using the widely used Barkley model, clearly show that spiral waves in the bistability region exhibit unique properties. For example, a spiral wave can either rotate around a core that is in an unexcited state, or the tip of the spiral wave describes a circular trajectory located inside an excited region. The boundaries of the parameter regions with positive and "negative" cores have been defined numerically and analytically evaluated. It is also shown that the creation of a positive or "negative" core may depend on the initial conditions, which leads to hysteresis of spiral waves. In addition, the influence of gradient flow on the dynamics of the spiral wave, which is related to the tension of the scroll wave filaments in a three-dimensional medium, is studied.

2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (06) ◽  
pp. 1250148
Author(s):  
GUOYONG YUAN ◽  
ZHICHENG FENG ◽  
AIGUO XU ◽  
GUANGRUI WANG ◽  
SHAOYING CHEN

The dynamics in excitable media driven by a specific spatiotemporal wave are studied by investigating wave states, the motion of tips and synchronized behaviors. We demonstrate that multiple-armed spiral waves can be generated in excitable media with rest initial conditions by directly injecting a rigidly rotating spiral wave, also that the meandering driver can induce the spiral wave, with the wider excited parts and the same frequency as the driving wave, in the driven system. It is more interesting to find that the higher similarity between the driving and driven waves occurs when the driving strength is smaller. We also study the dynamics of spiral waves in the driven system when the external driving wave is introduced by the form of difference, and find that the stronger synchronized behaviors appear when the driving strength is larger. The dynamical behaviors can be understood by considering various characteristics of the excitable system, for example the existence of "refractory period" and "vulnerable period" and so on.


1993 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 445-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALEXANDER V. PANFILOV ◽  
JAMES P. KEENER

We study numerically the behavior of a scroll wave in a three-dimensional excitable medium with stepwise heterogeneity, using a FitzHugh Nagumo type model. We find that if the refractory periods in the two homogeneous subregions are sufficiently different, the scroll breaks into two scrolls rotating independently in each part of the medium. Eventually, the faster scroll eliminates the slower one leading to a stationary process, in which the scroll wave surviving in the region of faster recovery acts as a source for planar waves in the region of slower recovery.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (6) ◽  
pp. 1281-1286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Zykov ◽  
Alexei Krekhov ◽  
Eberhard Bodenschatz

Self-sustained waves of electrophysiological activity can cause arrhythmia in the heart. These reentrant excitations have been associated with spiral waves circulating around either an anatomically defined weakly conducting region or a functionally determined core. Recently, an ablation procedure has been clinically introduced that stops atrial fibrillation of the heart by destroying the electrical activity at the spiral core. This is puzzling because the tissue at the anatomically defined spiral core would already be weakly conducting, and a further decrease should not improve the situation. In the case of a functionally determined core, an ablation procedure should even further stabilize the rotating wave. The efficacy of the procedure thus needs explanation. Here, we show theoretically that fundamentally in any excitable medium a region with a propagation velocity faster than its surrounding can act as a nucleation center for reentry and can anchor an induced spiral wave. Our findings demonstrate a mechanistic underpinning for the recently developed ablation procedure. Our theoretical results are based on a very general and widely used two-component model of an excitable medium. Moreover, the important control parameters used to realize conditions for the discovered phenomena are applicable to quite different multicomponent models.


1999 ◽  
Vol 09 (04) ◽  
pp. 695-704 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. N. BIKTASHEV ◽  
A. V. HOLDEN ◽  
S. F. MIRONOV ◽  
A. M. PERTSOV ◽  
A. V. ZAITSEV

Ventricular fibrillation is believed to be produced by the breakdown of re-entrant propagation waves of excitation into multiple re-entrant sources. These re-entrant waves may be idealized as spiral waves in two-dimensional, and scroll waves in three-dimensional excitable media. Optically monitored, simultaneously recorded endocardial and epicardial patterns of activation on the ventricular wall do not always show spiral waves. We show that numerical simulations, even with a simple homogeneous excitable medium, can reproduce the key features of the simultaneous endo- and epicardial visualizations of propagating activity, and so these recordings may be interpreted in terms of scroll waves within the ventricular wall.


Author(s):  
Samuel R Kuo ◽  
Natalia A Trayanova

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is believed to be perpetuated by recirculating spiral waves. Atrial structures are often characterized with action potentials of varying morphologies; however, the role of the structure-dependent atrial electrophysiological heterogeneity in spiral wave behaviour is not well understood. The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of action potential morphology heterogeneity associated with the major atrial structures in spiral wave maintenance. The present study also focuses on how this effect is further modulated by the presence of the inherent periodicity in atrial structure. The goals of the study are achieved through the simulation of electrical behaviour in a two-dimensional atrial tissue model that incorporates the representation of action potentials in various structurally distinct regions in the right atrium. Periodic boundary conditions are then imposed to form a cylinder (quasi three-dimensional), thus allowing exploration of the additional effect of structure periodicity on spiral wave behaviour. Transmembrane potential maps and phase singularity traces are analysed to determine effects on spiral wave behaviour. Results demonstrate that the prolonged refractoriness of the crista terminalis (CT) affects the pattern of spiral wave reentry, while the variation in action potential morphology of the other structures does not. The CT anchors the spiral waves, preventing them from drifting away. Spiral wave dynamics is altered when the ends of the sheet are spliced together to form a cylinder. The main effect of the continuous surface is the generation of secondary spiral waves which influences the primary rotors. The interaction of the primary and secondary spiral waves decreased as cylinder diameter increased.


1996 ◽  
Vol 77 (15) ◽  
pp. 3244-3247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Amemiya ◽  
Sándor Kádár ◽  
Petteri Kettunen ◽  
Kenneth Showalter

1995 ◽  
Vol 05 (01) ◽  
pp. 313-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
LADISLAV PIVKA ◽  
ALEXANDER L. ZHELEZNYAK ◽  
CHAI WAH WU ◽  
LEON O. CHUA

This paper reports on the simulation, in three-dimensional cellular-neural-network (CNN) arrays of Chua’s circuits, of basic three-dimensional scroll wave patterns observed previously from other media. Among the simulated patterns are the straight scroll wave, twisted scroll wave in both homogeneous and inhomogeneous media, as well as the scroll ring. These types of waves have been obtained for only one set of circuit parameters by varying the initial conditions.


eLife ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rupamanjari Majumder ◽  
Iolanda Feola ◽  
Alexander S Teplenin ◽  
Antoine AF de Vries ◽  
Alexander V Panfilov ◽  
...  

Propagation of non-linear waves is key to the functioning of diverse biological systems. Such waves can organize into spirals, rotating around a core, whose properties determine the overall wave dynamics. Theoretically, manipulation of a spiral wave core should lead to full spatiotemporal control over its dynamics. However, this theory lacks supportive evidence (even at a conceptual level), making it thus a long-standing hypothesis. Here, we propose a new phenomenological concept that involves artificially dragging spiral waves by their cores, to prove the aforementioned hypothesis in silico, with subsequent in vitro validation in optogenetically modified monolayers of rat atrial cardiomyocytes. We thereby connect previously established, but unrelated concepts of spiral wave attraction, anchoring and unpinning to demonstrate that core manipulation, through controlled displacement of heterogeneities in excitable media, allows forced movement of spiral waves along pre-defined trajectories. Consequently, we impose real-time spatiotemporal control over spiral wave dynamics in a biological system.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 98-98
Author(s):  
Daniel C. Fisher

Conical skeletal elements of various morphologies are a feature common to numerous Lower and Middle Cambrian organisms of problematic affinity, not to mention their occurrence in multiple extant metazoan phyla. In some cases these display helicospiral morphology, sometimes with dextral and sinistral morphs that may have been paired structures in a bilaterally symmetrical body plan. Such paired elements, including spines of coeloscleritophorans, appear to show a spicular substructure with some suggestion of spatial organization comparable to that of phyllotactic systems in vascular plants. These recurring structural themes raise old questions regarding the significance and mode of development of spiral forms and patterns in many organisms, both unicellular and multicellular.Most recent work on phyllotaxis has interpreted patterns of spiral organization as emergent geometrical properties of systems controlled by local reaction-diffusion interactions around the developing plant axis, without recourse to any explicitly spiral process. The term “generative spiral,” for the pattern linking consecutively formed elements, has thus taken on a purely descriptive, rather than mechanistic, meaning. Likewise, helicospiral shells and comparable structures are generally assumed to reflect no truly spiral growth mechanism, but rather, the regular scaling and displacement of a fundamentally concentric, cone-within-cone, accretionary system. Explanations for the common appearance of such forms include the structural strength offered by adherent whorls (though many forms are evolute), and the simplicity of isometric growth (though departures from logarithmic spirals are common).An alternative perspective was suggested initially by discovery of a higher order pattern in the phyllotactic systems of some conifers, wherein the handedness of the generative spiral reverses as each parent axis gives rise to daughters, through the full range of levels in the branching hierarchy. Although this may be explicable in conventional terms, it may also be interpreted as involving a spiral wave of activation passing rhythmically around the plant axis, at or within some critical distance of the apical meristem. Models for such phenomena are provided by several physical systems involving excitable media, the most well known of which is the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction, and by some biological systems, such as neural networks or aggregations of slime mold. At nearly the opposite end of the organismic realm, vertebrate teeth, most of which are subtly but fundamentally helicospiral in form, show features that also suggest rotating waves of activity. These include the common presence of an axial canal in the dentin underlying tooth cusps, which could represent the phase singularity of a rotating wave in the layer of odontoblasts responsible for dentin formation, and asymmetries in autoradiographic patterns associated with developing teeth. In such systems it may be generally true that the period of other physiological cycles that modulate secretory activity is not a simple multiple of the period of rotation of the spiral wave. This would result in a regular change in phase relationship, generating helicospiral form. Additional applications of this principle may illumine features as diverse as bovid horns and the handedness of supernumerary appendages in grafting experiments on insects and amphibians. Spiral waves in excitable media also have properties of symmetry and capacity for generating serial structure that make them intriguing candidates for involvement in even earlier stages of metazoan development.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (20) ◽  
pp. 1650127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guoyong Yuan ◽  
Xueping Bao ◽  
Shiping Yang ◽  
Guangrui Wang ◽  
Shaoying Chen

Spiral waves and pulses in the excitable medium with an anomalous diffusion are studied. In the medium with an one-sided fractional diffusion in the [Formula: see text]-direction and a normal diffusion in the [Formula: see text]-direction, a pulse, traveling along the positive [Formula: see text]-direction, has a smaller velocity, which is different from the diffusion of a source in the other media. Its propagating velocity is a linear and increasing function of the square root of diffusion parameter, whose increasing rate depends on the fractional order. A minimal value of the diffusion parameter is needed for successfully propagating pulses, and the threshold becomes large with a decrease of the fractional order. For pulse trains, the frequency-locked bands are shifted along the increasing direction of the perturbation period when the fractional order is decreased. In the propagating process of a spiral wave, the tip drift is induced by the one-sided fractional diffusion, which may be explained by analyzing the SV area in front of the tip.


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