Mathematical Biology Seminar
Margaret Beck
Boston University
Wednesday Feb. 11, 2008
3:05pm in LCB 215 "Electrical waves in a
one-dimensional model of cardiac tissue"
Abstract:
The electrical dynamics in the heart is modeled by a two-component
PDE. Using geometric singular perturbation theory, it is shown that
a traveling pulse solution, which corresponds to a single heartbeat,
exists. One key aspect of the proof involves tracking the solution
near a point on the slow manifold that is not normally
hyperbolic. This is achieved by desingularizing the vector field
using a blow-up technique. This feature is relevant because it
distinguishes cardiac impulses from, for example, nerve
impulses. Stability of the pulse is also shown, by computing the
zeros of the Evans function. Although the spectrum of one of the
fast components is only marginally stable, due to essential spectrum
that accumulates at the origin, it is shown that the spectrum of the
full pulse consists of an isolated eigenvalue at zero and essential
spectrum that is bounded away from the imaginary axis. Thus, this
model provides an example in a biological application reminiscent of
a previously observed mathematical phenomenon: that connecting an
unstable - in this case marginally stable - front and back can
produce a stable pulse.
Finally, remarks are made regarding the existence and stability of
spatially periodic pulses, corresponding to successive heartbeats,
and their relationship with alternans, irregular action potentials
that have been linked with arrhythmia.
|