Acute ventricular loading to 30 mmHg in isolated rabbit hearts increased average epicardial activation time by 25% (P<0.0001) and action potential duration at 80% repolarization (P<0.0001).
Isolated perfused rabbit hearts subjected to increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure.
Increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (ventricular loading) vs 0 mmHg (30 mmHg)
Epicardial activation time and action potential duration, p=<0.0001
p-value: p=<0.0001
INTRODUCTION: Mechanical stimulation can induce electrophysiologic changes in cardiac myocytes, but how mechanoelectric feedback in the intact heart affects action potential propagation remains unclear. METHODS AND RESULTS: Changes in action potential propagation and repolarization with increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure from 0 to 30 mmHg were investigated using optical mapping in isolated perfused rabbit hearts. With respect to 0 mmHg, epicardial strain at 30 mmHg in the anterior left ventricle averaged 0.040 +/- 0.004 in the muscle fiber direction and 0.032 +/- 0.006 in the cross-fiber direction. An increase in ventricular loading increased average epicardial activation time by 25%+/- 3% (P < 0.0001) and correspondingly decreased average apparent surface conduction velocity by 16%+/- 7% (P = 0.007). Ventricular loading did not significantly alter action potential duration at 20% repolarization (APD20) but did at 80% repolarization (APD80), from 179 +/- 7 msec to 207 +/- 5 msec (P < 0.0001). The dispersion of APD20 was decreased with loading from 19 +/- 2 msec to 13 +/- 2 msec (P = 0.024), whereas the dispersion of APD80 was not significantly changed. These electrophysiologic changes with ventricular loading were not affected by the nonspecific stretch-activated channel blocker streptomycin (200 microM) and were not attributable to changes in myocardial perfusion or the presence of an electromechanical decoupling agent (butanedione monoxime) during optical mapping. CONCLUSION: Acute loading of the left ventricle of the isolated rabbit heart decreased apparent epicardial conduction velocity and increased action potential duration by a load-dependent mechanism that may not involve stretch-activated channels.
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Derrick Sung
University of California, San Diego
Robert W. Mills
University of Copenhagen
Jan Schettler
University of Rostock
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology
University of California, San Diego
University of Rostock
Zero to Three
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Sung et al. (Tue,) reported a other. Increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (ventricular loading) vs. 0 mmHg was evaluated on Epicardial activation time and action potential duration (p=<0.0001). Acute ventricular loading to 30 mmHg in isolated rabbit hearts increased average epicardial activation time by 25% (P<0.0001) and action potential duration at 80% repolarization (P<0.0001).
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a2082d9cd682a52c6f89cb8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1540-8167.2003.03072.x