Sensitivity of ECG QRS Complexes to His-Purkinje Structure in Computational Heart Models
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
May 22, 2025
Abstract
Cardiac digital twins (CDT) are emerging as a potentially transformative tool
in cardiology. A critical yet understudied determinant of CDT accuracy is the
His-Purkinje system (HPS), which influences ventricular depolarization and
shapes the QRS complex of the electrocardiogram (ECG). Here, we quantify how
structural variations in the HPS alter QRS morphology and identify which
parameters drive this variability. We generated HPS structures using a
fractal-tree, rule-based algorithm, systematically varying nine model
parameters and assessing their effects on ten QRS-related metrics. We conducted
a Sobol sensitivity analysis to quantify direct and interaction-driven
contributions of each parameter to observed variability. Our results suggest
that most minor changes in HPS structure exert minimal influence on individual
QRS features; however, certain parameter combinations can produce abnormal QRS
morphologies. Wave durations and peak amplitudes of the QRS complex exhibit low
sensitivity to individual HPS parameter variations; however, we found that
specific parameter combinations can result in interactions that significantly
alter these aspects of QRS morphology. We found that certain HPS structures can
cause premature QRS formation, obscuring P-wave formation. QRS timing
variability was primarily driven by interactions among branch and fascicle
angles and branch repulsivity, though other parameters also showed notable
interaction effects. In addition to interactions, individual variations in the
number of branches in the HPS also affected QRS timing. While future models
should account for these potential sources of variability, this study indicates
that minor anatomical differences between a healthy patient's HPS and that of a
generic model are unlikely to significantly impact model fidelity or clinical
interpretation when both systems are physiologically normal.