https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ot-82.html Conduction velocity (CV) heterogeneity and myocardial fibrosis both promote re-entry, but the relationship between fibrosis as determined by left atrial (LA) late-gadolinium enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (LGE-CMRI) and CV remains uncertain. Although average CV has been shown to correlate with regional LGE-CMRI in patients with persistent AF, we test the hypothesis that a localized relationship exists to underpin LGE-CMRI as a minimally invasive tool to map myocardial conduction properties for risk stratification and treatment guidance. 3D LA electroanatomic maps during LA pacing were acquired from eight patients with persistent AF following electrical cardioversion. Local CVs were computed using triads of concurrently acquired electrograms and were co-registered to allow correlation with LA wall intensities obtained from LGE-CMRI, quantified using normalized intensity (NI) and image intensity ratio (IIR). Association was evaluated using multilevel linear regression. An association betweeles quantitative reproducibility of the association.It is now widely accepted that the glial cells of the central nervous system (CNS) are key players in many processes, especially when they are activated via neuron-glia or glia-glia interactions. In turn, many of the glia-derived pro-inflammatory cytokines contribute to central sensitization during inflammation or nerve injury-evoked pathological pain conditions. The prototype of pro-inflammatory cytokines is interleukin-1beta (IL-1β) which has widespread functions in inflammatory processes. Our earlier findings showed that in the spinal cord (besides neurons) astrocytes express the ligand binding interleukin-1 receptor type 1 (IL-1R1) subunit of the IL-1 receptor in the spinal dorsal horn in the chronic phase of inflammatory pain. Interestingly, spinal astrocytes are also the main source of the IL-1β itself which in turn acts on its neuronal and astrocytic IL-1R1 leading