Circulation, Vol 65, 435-439, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
S Ahnve and H Vallin
To evaluate whether heart-rate-induced changes of the QT interval are
dependent on autonomic tone, we studied 13 healthy subjects, mean age 67.5
years. The maximal uncorrected QT from leads I, II, V1 and V6 was
determined during atrial pacing at 90 beats/min and 130 beats/min before
and after i.v. administration of propranolol, 0.1 mg/kg, and atropine, 0.02
mg/kg. Significant reductions (p less than 0.01) of QT were induced by the
paced increases in heart rate before drugs (10%), after propranolol (10%)
and after the combination of atropine and propranolol (9%). Propranolol
caused no significant change in the QT interval when heart rate was held
constant by pacing. In contrast, atropine produced rate-independent
reductions of QT interval (5%) in subjects with beta-adrenergic blockade (p
less than 0.05). Bazett's formula for heart-rate correction of the QT
interval (QTc) was not applicable for atrial overdrive pacing, as it gave
proportionately longer QTc values at higher heart rates. These results show
that heart rate is a major determinant of the duration of the QT interval
and that paced changes in heart rate induce QT-interval responses that are
essentially uninfluenced by autonomic tone. The rate-dependent effect of
the QT interval produced by elimination of cholinergic tone suggests a
direct influence of cholinergic activity on the repolarization of
ventricular myocardium.
ARTICLES
Influence of heart rate and inhibition of autonomic tone on the QT interval
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