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Direct cardiac stimulation was conducted in the open chest. In normal animals, auricular stimulation at frequencies faster than the spontaneous rate caused little change in vascular pressures or cardiac output. Comparable ventricular stimulation in the same animals caused falls in cardiac output and blood pressure, with elevations in venous pressure. In contrast, ventricular stimulation in animals with complete heart block caused elevations in cardiac output and blood pressure, and declines in venous pressure. A study was also made of repetitive stimulation in experimental cardiac arrest. Occasionally pacemaking was of value in the resuscitation, but in most cases effective contractions could not be induced with stimulation.
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TE Starzl
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Robert A. Gaertner
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Roscoe C. Webb
Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Circulation
Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Johns Hopkins Hospital
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Starzl et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a160e2a58f24b40adb56c40 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.11.6.952