Abstract
Atrial electromechanics plays a key role in cardiac function by regulating ventricular filling and global hemodynamics, yet remains challenging to model consistently across scales. In this work, a multiscale atrial digital twin for simulations of normal and pathological atrial function is presented, formulated as an electromechanical framework for biatrial simulations that couples three-dimensional atrial electrophysiology and mechanics with a closed-loop zero-dimensional circulatory model. The framework is calibrated on a patient-specific biatrial anatomy to reproduce physiological regional activation times, atrial volumes, ejection fractions, and pressure–volume loop characteristics. The simulations capture all atrial functional phases throughout the cardiac cycle, including realistic figure-eight pressure–volume loops, an aspect hard to achieve in computational studies. A systematic sensitivity analysis quantifies the influence of active contraction, passive stiffness, boundary conditions, and circulatory parameters on atrial function. Finally, application to a pathological scenario through induced persistent atrial fibrillation demonstrates how electrophysiological remodelling propagates across scales, leading to loss of effective atrial contraction, altered atrioventricular flow patterns, and a clinically relevant reduction in cardiac output. Overall, this multiphysics and multiscale framework provides a robust platform to investigate how atrial electrical alterations drive mechanical and hemodynamic alterations in both healthy and pathological conditions.
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Abstract
Atrial electromechanics plays a key role in cardiac function by regulating ventricular filling and global hemodynamics, yet remains challenging to model consistently across scales. In this work, a multiscale atrial digital twin for simulations of normal and pathological atrial function is presented, formulated as an electromechanical framework for biatrial simulations that couples three-dimensional atrial electrophysiology and mechanics with a closed-loop zero-dimensional circulatory model. The framework is calibrated on a patient-specific biatrial anatomy to reproduce physiological regional activation times, atrial volumes, ejection fractions, and pressure–volume loop characteristics. The simulations capture all atrial functional phases throughout the cardiac cycle, including realistic figure-eight pressure–volume loops, an aspect hard to achieve in computational studies. A systematic sensitivity analysis quantifies the influence of active contraction, passive stiffness, boundary conditions, and circulatory parameters on atrial function. Finally, application to a pathological scenario through induced persistent atrial fibrillation demonstrates how electrophysiological remodelling propagates across scales, leading to loss of effective atrial contraction, altered atrioventricular flow patterns, and a clinically relevant reduction in cardiac output. Overall, this multiphysics and multiscale framework provides a robust platform to investigate how atrial electrical alterations drive mechanical and hemodynamic alterations in both healthy and pathological conditions.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Misspelling in the author's name: Blas Echebarria
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