Ventricular response in atrial fibrillation: random or deterministic? Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The ventricular response in atrial fibrillation is often described as "chaotic," but this has not been demonstrated in the strict mathematical sense. A defining feature of chaotic systems is sensitive dependence on initial conditions: similar sequences evolve similarly in the short term but then diverge exponentially. We developed a nonlinear predictive forecasting algorithm to search for predictability and sensitive dependence on initial conditions in the ventricular response during atrial fibrillation. The algorithm was tested for simulated R-R intervals from a linear oscillator with and without superimposed white noise, a chaotic signal (the logistic map) with and without superimposed white noise, and a pseudorandom signal and was then applied to R-R intervals from 16 chronic atrial fibrillation patients. Short-term predictability was demonstrated for the linear oscillators, without loss of predictive ability farther into the future. The chaotic system demonstrated high short-term predictability that declined rapidly further into the future. The pseudorandom signal was unpredictable. The ventricular response in atrial fibrillation was weakly predictable (statistically significant predictability in 8 of 16 patients), without sensitive dependence on initial conditions. Although the R-R interval sequence is not completely unpredictable, a low-dimensional chaotic attractor does not govern the irregular ventricular response during atrial fibrillation.

publication date

  • August 1, 1999

Research

keywords

  • Atrial Fibrillation
  • Ventricular Function

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0032879966

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1152/ajpheart.1999.277.2.H452

PubMed ID

  • 10444468

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 277

issue

  • 2