Fast and slow atrioventricular nodal pathways demonstrated a similar time-dependent recovery property, with the slow-to-slow curve having a similar time constant as the fast-to-fast curve.
Observational (n=17)
17 patients, including 9 with dual AV nodal pathways and 8 controls, undergoing electrophysiological pacing protocols to assess AV nodal recovery.
Electrophysiological pacing protocols (atrial extrastimuli) vs Control patients without dual pathways
Time-dependent recovery property (time constant and effective refractory period)
The purpose of this study was to determine whether fast and slow atrioventricular (AV) nodal pathways have the same recovery property. AV nodal recovery property is studied by delivering atrial extrastimuli coupled to atrial beats and plotting nodal coupling intervals against nodal conduction time. In patients with dual pathways the resultant curves will include a fast to fast (F-F) and a fast to slow (F-S) pathway coupled curves. Although fast pathway recovery property can be represented by the former, slow pathway recovery property requires further assessment by studying slow to slow (S-S) pathways coupled curve. In 9 patients with dual pathways F-F, F-S, S-F, and S-S curves were obtained by pacing protocols. In 8 patients (control) without dual pathways, F-F curve and atrial extrastimuli coupled to a preceding slowly conducted fast pathway beat (also designated as S-F curve) were obtained. (1) The S-S curve had a similar time constant as the F-F curve. (2) Although the S-S curve was markedly shifted upward and leftward from the F-F curve, the degree of leftward and upward shifts of the S-S curve from the F-F curve were both close to the difference of the basic fast and slow pathway conduction time (a constant). (3) Although the effective refractory period of the fast pathway in dual pathway patients was longer than that of the control patients, the slow pathway effective refractory period when corrected was close to that of fast pathway in control patients. These results suggest that the fast and slow AV nodal pathways have a similar time-dependent recovery property.Dual atrioventricular nodal pathway recovery properties were studied by delivering progressively shorter atrial extrastimuli coupled to atrial beats in which the last or last few beats were conducting either via fast (F) or slow (S) pathways, and F-F, F-S, S-F, and S-S coupled recovery curves were constructed. Our results suggest that the fast and slow atrioventricular nodal pathways have similar time-dependent recovery property.
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Ming‐Lon Young
Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital
Chi-Tai Kuo
Chang Gung University
Vikas Kohli
National Heart Institute
The American Journal of Cardiology
University of Miami
Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
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Young et al. (Sat,) conducted a observational in Dual atrioventricular nodal pathways (n=17). Electrophysiological pacing protocols (atrial extrastimuli) vs. Control patients without dual pathways was evaluated on Time-dependent recovery property (time constant and effective refractory period). Fast and slow atrioventricular nodal pathways demonstrated a similar time-dependent recovery property, with the slow-to-slow curve having a similar time constant as the fast-to-fast curve.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a23a1358ac8ec529b08f48a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9149(96)00780-1