Circulation, Vol 71, 813-822, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
KH Dangman and BF Hoffman
We studied the effects of single premature stimuli on automatic and
triggered rhythms occurring in preparations of isolated canine Purkinje
fibers. Preparations were made from false tendons, the subendocardial right
bundle branch, and infarct zone Purkinje fibers 24 hr after occlusion of
the left anterior descending coronary artery, and were studied by standard
microelectrode techniques. Single premature impulses almost always produced
reset of automatic rhythms, whether the pacemaker had a low (less than -60
mV), intermediate (-61 to -70 mV), or high (greater than -70 mV) maximum
diastolic potential. In contrast, single premature impulses imposed on
triggered rhythms sometimes were found to alter these rhythms; often, early
premature impulses (i.e., during phase 3) resulted in either a shortened
first return cycle or a short period of arrest of the rhythm. The results
of this study indicate that it may be possible to design simple
electrophysiologic tests using single premature stimuli to determine
whether an arrhythmia is being caused by an automatic focus or by triggered
activity.
ARTICLES
The effects of single premature stimuli on automatic and triggered rhythms in isolated canine Purkinje fibers
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