Skip to Content
Merck
  • A biosensing system using a multiparameter nonlinear dynamic analysis of cardiomyocyte beating for drug-induced arrhythmia recognition.

A biosensing system using a multiparameter nonlinear dynamic analysis of cardiomyocyte beating for drug-induced arrhythmia recognition.

Microsystems & nanoengineering (2022-05-14)
Hao Wang, Yue Wu, Quchao Zou, Wenjian Yang, Zhongyuan Xu, Hao Dong, Zhijing Zhu, Depeng Wang, Tianxing Wang, Ning Hu, Diming Zhang
ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death in humans. Therefore, cardiotoxicity is one of the most important adverse effects assessed by arrhythmia recognition in drug development. Recently, cell-based techniques developed for arrhythmia recognition primarily employ linear methods such as time-domain analysis that detect and compare individual waveforms and thus fall short in some applications that require automated and efficient arrhythmia recognition from large datasets. We carried out the first report to develop a biosensing system that integrated impedance measurement and multiparameter nonlinear dynamic algorithm (MNDA) analysis for drug-induced arrhythmia recognition and classification. The biosensing system cultured cardiomyocytes as physiologically relevant models, used interdigitated electrodes to detect the mechanical beating of the cardiomyocytes, and employed MNDA analysis to recognize drug-induced arrhythmia from the cardiomyocyte beating recording. The best performing MNDA parameter, approximate entropy, enabled the system to recognize the appearance of sertindole- and norepinephrine-induced arrhythmia in the recording. The MNDA reconstruction in phase space enabled the system to classify the different arrhythmias and quantify the severity of arrhythmia. This new biosensing system utilizing MNDA provides a promising and alternative method for drug-induced arrhythmia recognition and classification in cardiological and pharmaceutical applications.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Roche
Fibronectin, from human plasma