Circulation, Vol 73, 830-836, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
DW Wallick, SL Stuesse and Y Masuda
Concurrent stimulation of the parasympathetic and sympathetic branches of
the autonomic nervous system causes a diminished sympathetic response at
high levels of vagal activity. This "accentuated antagonism" has been
demonstrated for cardiac chronotropic, inotropic, and dromotropic
responses. The effect on conduction was demonstrated with tonic stimulation
of the vagus nerve. However, normally the vagus nerve fires periodically at
certain times in the cardiac cycle. Thus, we have studied whether a similar
interaction exists in the modulation of atrioventricular condition when
short bursts of vagal stimulation were placed in various portions of the
cardiac cycle. Anesthetized open- chest mongrel dogs were instrumented for
stimulation of the cervical vagi and stellate ganglia when the heart was
paced. We determined the relationship between cardiac cycle length,
direction of action potential propagation, and levels of sympathetic and
vagal activation and their effects on atrioventricular conduction times.
All of the factors investigated, namely levels of vagal and stellate
stimulation, pacing intervals, and direction of propagation of action
potentials, affected atrioventricular conduction times. Furthermore, the
vagal effect was greater at short cardiac cycle lengths. When bursts of
vagal stimulation were timed to result in maximal or minimal prolongation
of atrioventricular conduction, no significant effects of sympathetic-
parasympathetic interaction on atrioventricular conduction times were
apparent. However, an analysis of the differences in prolongation of
atrioventricular conduction with periodic vagal stimulation revealed that a
significant sympathetic-vagal interaction existed for these differences.
Thus, autonomic neurotransmitters differentially affect cardiac conduction
times depending on time of application of the stimulus.
ARTICLES
Sympathetic and periodic vagal influences on antegrade and retrograde conduction through the canine atrioventricular node
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