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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin A. Coppola is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin A. Coppola.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2009

Transmural myocardial mechanics during isovolumic contraction.

Hiroshi Ashikaga; Tycho I.G. van der Spoel; Benjamin A. Coppola; Jeffrey H. Omens

OBJECTIVES We sought to resolve the 3-dimensional transmural heterogeneity in myocardial mechanics observed during the isovolumic contraction (IC) phase. BACKGROUND Although myocardial deformation during IC is expected to be little, recent tissue Doppler imaging studies suggest dynamic myocardial motions during this phase with biphasic longitudinal tissue velocities in left ventricular (LV) long-axis views. A unifying understanding of myocardial mechanics that would account for these dynamic aspects of IC is lacking. METHODS We determined the time course of 3-dimensional finite strains in the anterior LV of 14 adult mongrel dogs in vivo during IC and ejection with biplane cineradiography of implanted transmural markers. Transmural fiber orientations were histologically measured in the heart tissue postmortem. The strain time course was determined in the subepicardial, midwall, and subendocardial layers referenced to the end-diastolic configuration. RESULTS During IC, there was circumferential stretch in the subepicardial layer, whereas circumferential shortening was observed in the midwall and the subendocardial layer. There was significant longitudinal shortening and wall thickening across the wall. Although longitudinal tissue velocity showed a biphasic profile; tissue deformation in the longitudinal as well as other directions was almost linear during IC. Subendocardial fibers shortened, whereas subepicardial fibers lengthened. During ejection, all strain components showed a significant change over time that was greater in magnitude than that of IC. Significant transmural gradient was observed in all normal strains. CONCLUSIONS IC is a dynamic phase characterized by deformation in circumferential, longitudinal, and radial directions. Tissue mechanics during IC, including fiber shortening, appear uninterrupted by rapid longitudinal motion created by mitral valve closure. This study is the first to report layer-dependent deformation of circumferential strain, which results from layer-dependent deformation of myofibers during IC. Complex myofiber mechanics provide the mechanism of brief clockwise LV rotation (untwisting) and significant wall thickening during IC within the isovolumic constraint.


Experimental Physiology | 2009

Effect of transmurally heterogeneous myocyte excitation–contraction coupling on canine left ventricular electromechanics

Stuart G. Campbell; Elliot J. Howard; Jazmin Aguado-Sierra; Benjamin A. Coppola; Jeffrey H. Omens; Lawrence J. Mulligan; Andrew D. McCulloch; Roy Kerckhoffs

The excitation–contraction coupling properties of cardiac myocytes isolated from different regions of the mammalian left ventricular wall have been shown to vary considerably, with uncertain effects on ventricular function. We embedded a cell‐level excitation–contraction coupling model with region‐dependent parameters within a simple finite element model of left ventricular geometry to study effects of electromechanical heterogeneity on local myocardial mechanics and global haemodynamics. This model was compared with one in which heterogeneous myocyte parameters were assigned randomly throughout the mesh while preserving the total amount of each cell subtype. The two models displayed nearly identical transmural patterns of fibre and cross‐fibre strains at end‐systole, but showed clear differences in fibre strains at earlier points during systole. Haemodynamic function, including peak left ventricular pressure, maximal rate of left ventricular pressure development and stroke volume, were essentially identical in the two models. These results suggest that in the intact ventricle heterogeneously distributed myocyte subtypes primarily impact local deformation of the myocardium, and that these effects are greatest during early systole.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2008

Changes in regional myocardial volume during the cardiac cycle: implications for transmural blood flow and cardiac structure

Hiroshi Ashikaga; Benjamin A. Coppola; Katrina Go Yamazaki; Francisco Villarreal; Jeffrey H. Omens; James W. Covell

Although previous studies report a reduction in myocardial volume during systole, myocardial volume changes during the cardiac cycle have not been quantitatively analyzed with high spatiotemporal resolution. We studied the time course of myocardial volume in the anterior mid-left ventricular (LV) wall of normal canine heart in vivo (n = 14) during atrial or LV pacing using transmurally implanted markers and biplane cineradiography (8 ms/frame). During atrial pacing, there was a significant transmural gradient in maximum volume decrease (4.1, 6.8, and 10.3% at subepi, midwall, and subendo layer, respectively, P = 0.002). The rate of myocardial volume increase during diastole was 4.7 +/- 5.8, 6.8 +/- 6.1, and 10.8 +/- 7.7 ml.min(-1).g(-1), respectively, which is substantially larger than the average myocardial blood flow in the literature measured by the microsphere method (0.7-1.3 ml.min(-1).g(-1)). In the early activated region during LV pacing, myocardial volume began to decrease before the LV pressure upstroke. We conclude that the volume change is greater than would be estimated from the known average transmural blood flow. This implies the existence of blood-filled spaces within the myocardium, which could communicate with the ventricular lumen. Our data in the early activated region also suggest that myocardial volume change is caused not by the intramyocardial tissue pressure but by direct impingement of the contracting myocytes on the microvasculature.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2007

Transmural Dispersion of Myofiber Mechanics: Implications for Electrical Heterogeneity In Vivo

Hiroshi Ashikaga; Benjamin A. Coppola; Bruce Hopenfeld; Eric S. Leifer; Elliot R. McVeigh; Jeffrey H. Omens


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2007

Asynchrony of ventricular activation affects magnitude and timing of fiber stretch in late-activated regions of the canine heart.

Benjamin A. Coppola; James W. Covell; Andrew D. McCulloch; Jeffrey H. Omens


Molecular & cellular biomechanics : MCB | 2008

Role of tissue structure on ventricular wall mechanics.

Benjamin A. Coppola; Jeffrey H. Omens


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 21317: Spatial Heterogeneity of Fiber Relengthening Underlies Impaired LV Filling in the Dyssynchronous Left Ventricle

Elliot J. Howard; Benjamin A. Coppola; Roy Kerckhoffs; Jeffrey H. Omens; Andrew D. McCulloch; James W. Covell


The FASEB Journal | 2008

Factors influencing the contribution of myocardial laminar sheets to ventricular wall thickening

Benjamin A. Coppola; James W. Covell; Jeffrey H. Omens


The FASEB Journal | 2008

Transmural Changes in Myocardial Tissue Volume During the Cardiac Cycle: Implications for Microvascular Flow Patterns with Ventricular Pacing

Hiroshi Ashikaga; Benjamin A. Coppola; Katrina Go Yamazaki; Francisco Villarreal; Jeffrey H. Omens; James W. Covell


The FASEB Journal | 2006

Magnitude of prestretch during ventricular activation is proportional to the amount of late activated tissue in the canine heart

Benjamin A. Coppola; James W. Covell; Jeffrey H. Omens

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Hiroshi Ashikaga

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Bruce Hopenfeld

National Institutes of Health

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Roy Kerckhoffs

University of California

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