Does overdrive pacing affect the electrical activity and recovery time of sinoatrial node fibres in isolated rabbit atria?
Sinus node recovery time is determined by both a conduction component and a depression of automaticity caused by a slowing of diastolic depolarization.
STUDY OBJECTIVE: The aim was to investigate the mechanism of the intrinsic sinus node recovery time. DESIGN: The effect of 2 min periods of 20% and 50% overdrive on the electrical activity of fibres in the sinoatrial node was studied in isolated atria of rabbits under complete autonomic blockade (atropine 3 x 10(-6) M and propranolol 3 x 10(-7) M). EXPERIMENTAL MATERIAL: Rabbits (New Zealand white) of either sex up to 3 kg weight were used. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The first returning cycle after overdrive is prolonged not only by the time needed for retrograde plus antegrade conduction but also by a delay in impulse formation (overdrive suppression). During pacing, action potential duration, amplitude, maximum diastolic potential (only in primary pacemaker fibres), and diastolic depolarisation rate were all decreased. Action potential duration, amplitude and maximum diastolic potential returned to control value during the first cycle following a period of overdrive, but diastolic depolarisation remained depressed during many consecutive cycles. In primary pacemaker fibres, diastolic depolarisation appeared to be depressed throughout diastole. In latent pacemaker fibres diastolic depolarisation was depressed only in the second part of the diastole. CONCLUSIONS: Sinus node recovery time has two components: (1) a conduction component of both retrograde and antegrade conduction, and (2) a depression of the automaticity (= overdrive suppression), which is only due to a slowing of diastolic depolarisation.
Prinsze et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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