Circulation, Vol 58, 1002-1009, Copyright © 1978 by American Heart Association
EL Michelson, J Morganroth, JF Spear, JA Kastor and ME Josephson
Fixed coupled ventricular premature depolarizations (VPDs) are usually
considered reentrant; recent experimental models have demonstrated that
parasystolic rhythms may also appear in fixed coupled patterns. To analyze
the mechanisms of fixed coupled VPDs, 60 exercise tests were chosen to
evaluate the response of VPD coupling intervals to changes in cycle length
of the dominant supraventricular rhythm. Selection criteria included the
presence of frequent, unifocal VPDs that were fixed coupled (variation less
than or equal to 80 msec) at any one cycle length, with the persistence of
VPDs at several different cycle lengths. Three patterns of response of
coupling intervals to changes in cycle length were noted: 1) 32 patients
with a direct linear relation (r greater than or equal to 0.9) of coupling
intervals to cycle length; 2) 16 patients with coupling intervals fixed,
independent of cycle length; and 3) 12 patients with no consistent relation
over a wide range of cycle lengths. Two patients in group 2 and four in
group 3 fulfilled criteria for parasystole with interectopic intervals that
remained constant at different cycle lengths. These results suggest that
VPDs in group 1 are reentrant, while some patients with group 2 or 3
responses have evidence for parasystolic rhythms. We conclude that 1) fixed
coupling of VPDs is not diagnostic of reentry, and 2) changes in cycle
length induced with exercise may be useful in the analysis of mechanisms of
VPDs.
ARTICLES
Fixed coupling: different mechanisms revealed by exercise-induced changes in cycle length
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