Computer Analysis of Isolated Cardiomyocyte Contraction Process via Advanced Image Processing Techniques

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Authors

ODSTRCILIK Jan CMIEL Vratislav KOLAR Radim RONZHINA Marina BAIAZITOVA Larisa PEŠL Martin PŘIBYL Jan PROVAZNIK Ivo

Year of publication 2015
Type Article in Proceedings
Conference Computing in Cardiology 2015
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web http://www.cinc.org/archives/2015/pdf/0453.pdf
Field Genetics and molecular biology
Keywords Optical contraction analsys; Cardiomyoycyte; Atomic force microscopy
Attached files
Description Isolated cardiomyocytes (CMs) have been used as valid and useful model in experimental cardiology research for decades. A single CMs is considered as a functional unit with electrical, signaling, and mechanical functions of cell excitation-contraction process. The contraction function is usually measured via expensive and complex instruments which can either damage the cell or take much time for setting up Atomic Force Microscopy (AMF). In contrary, recent development of optical microscopy and digital cameras suggests utilization of touch-less CMs video acquisition in connection with advanced image processing techniques for automatic and precise evaluation of CMs contraction process. A typical adult CMs is a cylindrically-shaped cell (approx. with length 100µm and diameter 25µm) that can be observed as a bright structure surrounded by dark curve in bright-field optical microscopy. The dark curve surrounding the CMs are formed by cell membrane that blocks and scatters visible light. The proposed paper presents an automatic membrane detection method via computer processing of acquired video-sequences by utilization of dynamic active contour model. Evaluation of detected cell area is consequently used for estimation of CMs contraction function and its beating parameters. A set of eight isolated CMs video-sequences was acquired using bright-field optical microscopy equipped with high-speed scientific camera with framerate 50-100 fps and 512×512 pixel resolution. A contraction function was extracted from video-sequences and compared with synchronized contraction measurement by AFM. The results show high correlation (R>0.9) between the CMs beating parameters derived from estimated contraction function and standard AFM measurement. The results signalize the proposed methodology can be used for evaluation of CMs contraction processes, which can be useful in drug screening.
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