Do premature beats and rapid pacing increase spatial inhomogeneity in conduction and initiate reentrant arrhythmias in isolated rabbit left atria?
Isolated superfused left atria of the rabbit
Pacing protocols including single early premature beats, multiple premature beats, and rapid pacing
Slow pacing (2 Hz)
Spatial inhomogeneity in conduction (quantified by phase differences and inhomogeneity index)surrogate
Quantification of spatial inhomogeneities in conduction using phase maps is a useful tool to evaluate the vulnerability of the myocardial substrate for reentrant arrhythmias.
In isolated superfused left atria of the rabbit, inhomogeneity in conduction was quantified using the activation times measured with a high-density mapping system. At each recording site, the maximal difference with neighboring activation times (i.e., phase difference) was calculated. Local phase differences were plotted in a phase map, revealing the spatial distribution of inhomogeneities in conduction, and from each map a total index of inhomogeneity was calculated. During slow pacing (2 Hz) local differences in conduction velocity, depending on the direction of propagation, were found already. Inhomogeneity in conduction increased significantly during single early premature beats (inhomogeneity index increased from 2.3 to 3.1; P less than 0.001). The application of multiple premature beats further increased inhomogeneity in conduction, whereas rapid pacing induced the highest level of inhomogeneity (inhomogeneity index 5.3; P less than 0.001). An analysis of the spatial distribution of maximal phase differences revealed that during premature beats inhomogeneities in conduction were limited to an area of 6 mm around the point of origin of the premature impulse, whereas during rapid pacing inhomogeneities in conduction were found throughout the whole preparation. Phase maps constructed during the initiation of reentrant tachyarrhythmias showed that reentry occurred at sites with the highest phase differences. Quantification of spatial inhomogeneities in conduction is a useful tool to evaluate the vulnerability of the myocardial substrate for reentrant arrhythmias.
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Willem J. Lammers
Martin J. Schalij
C Kirchhof
AJP Heart and Circulatory Physiology
Transnational University Limburg
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Lammers et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d572cd75589c71d767e7d7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1990.259.4.h1254
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