Collision of excitation waves in the dog Purkinje system produced a distinctive uniphasic and positive extracellular wave form, with collision sites shifting based on the pacemaker site.
Ventricular conduction system of the dog
Pacing electrodes at opposite ends of a functionally single strand
Collision of excitation waves and associated extracellular/intracellular potential changes
The ventricular conduction system of the dog was explored with a 50µ extracellular electrode in an in vitro preparation with an intact right and left ventricular bundle branch system connected at the bundle of His. Two pacing electrodes at opposite ends of a functionally single strand produced collision of excitation waves with a distinctive extracellular wave form (uniphasic and positive instead of biphasic). The only changes in the intracellular potential associated with collision were a decrease in the time constant of the foot and an increase in the maximum rate of rise of the action potential, changes not uniquely produced hy collisions. During pacing at one point, collisions were detected at many places throughout the conduction system. The peripheral Purkinje system consisted of fine strands forming a network of interconnecting swirls, each covering 2-25 mm 2 Collisions were found in all swirls and their sites often shifted with a shift in the pacemaker site. Collisions also shifted in location between basic and premature beats which originated from a single point on the bundle of His.
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Madison S. Spach
Pediatric / Congenital Cardiology
Roger C. Barr
National Institutes of Health
Gerald S. Serwer
University of Michigan
Circulation Research
Duke University
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Spach et al. (Mon,) conducted a other in Ventricular conduction system of the dog. Pacing electrodes at opposite ends of a functionally single strand was evaluated on Collision of excitation waves and associated extracellular/intracellular potential changes. Collision of excitation waves in the dog Purkinje system produced a distinctive uniphasic and positive extracellular wave form, with collision sites shifting based on the pacemaker site.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0eaf0d8da6dd046147a4e2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.29.5.499