O
Olivier Bernus
Researcher at University of Bordeaux
Publications - 117
Citations - 2599
Olivier Bernus is an academic researcher from University of Bordeaux. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 86 publications receiving 2082 citations. Previous affiliations of Olivier Bernus include French Institute of Health and Medical Research & University of Leeds.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Models of cardiac tissue electrophysiology: progress, challenges and open questions.
Richard H. Clayton,Olivier Bernus,Elizabeth M. Cherry,Hans Dierckx,Flavio H. Fenton,L Mirabella,L Mirabella,Alexander V. Panfilov,Frank B. Sachse,Gunnar Seemann,Henggui Zhang +10 more
TL;DR: This paper proposes a tentative list of information that could be included in published descriptions of tissue electrophysiology models, and used to support interpretation and evaluation of simulation results, to discuss challenges and open questions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Verification of cardiac tissue electrophysiology simulators using an N-version benchmark
Steven A. Niederer,Eric Kerfoot,Alan P. Benson,Miguel O. Bernabeu,Olivier Bernus,Chris P. Bradley,Elizabeth M. Cherry,Richard H. Clayton,Flavio H. Fenton,Alan Garny,Elvio Heidenreich,Sander Land,Mary M. Maleckar,Pras Pathmanathan,Gernot Plank,Jose F. Rodriguez,Ishani Roy,Frank B. Sachse,Gunnar Seemann,Ola Skavhaug,Nic Smith +20 more
TL;DR: This study provides the first cardiac tissue electrophysiology simulation benchmark to allow these codes to be verified and was successfully evaluated on 11 simulation platforms to generate a consensus gold-standard converged solution.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ventricular arrhythmias and the His–Purkinje system
TL;DR: In drug-resistant cases of monomorphic and polymorphic Purkinje-related ventricular tachycardias, catheter ablation is a very effective treatment and the identification of vulnerable individuals remains challenging, and the molecular mechanisms of PurkinJe-related arrhythmias have to be characterized further to enable the development of interventions to prevent lethal cardiac arrhythms.
Journal ArticleDOI
Electrophysiological changes in heart failure and their implications for arrhythmogenesis
TL;DR: The electrophysiological remodeling and the alterations in intracellular calcium handling, and the resulting arrhythmogenic mechanisms associated with heart failure are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Relationship Between Fibrosis Detected on Late Gadolinium-Enhanced Cardiac Magnetic Resonance and Re-Entrant Activity Assessed With Electrocardiographic Imaging in Human Persistent Atrial Fibrillation.
Hubert Cochet,Hubert Cochet,Rémi Dubois,Seigo Yamashita,Nora Al Jefairi,Benjamin Berte,Jean-Marc Sellal,Darren A. Hooks,Antonio Frontera,Sana Amraoui,Sana Amraoui,Adlane Zemoura,Adlane Zemoura,Arnaud Denis,Arnaud Denis,Nicolas Derval,Nicolas Derval,Frédéric Sacher,Frédéric Sacher,Olivier Corneloup,Valérie Latrabe,Stephanie Clement-Guinaudeau,Jatin Relan,Sohail Zahid,Patrick M. Boyle,Natalia A. Trayanova,Olivier Bernus,Michel Montaudon,Michel Montaudon,François Laurent,François Laurent,Mélèze Hocini,Mélèze Hocini,Michel Haïssaguerre,Michel Haïssaguerre,Pierre Jaïs,Pierre Jaïs +36 more
TL;DR: The number of re-entrant regions during AF relates to the extent of LGE on CMR, with the location of these regions clustering to LGE areas, which affect procedural outcomes of ablation.