Circulation, Vol 77, 1003-1012, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
RW Henthorn, K Okumura, B Olshansky, VJ Plumb, PG Hess and AL Waldo
Prior data pertaining to transient entrainment and associated phenomena
have been best explained by pacing capture of a reentrant circuit. On this
basis, we hypothesized that rapid pacing from a single site of two
different constant pacing rates could constantly capture an appropriately
selected bipolar electrogram recording site from one direction with a
constant stimulus-to-electrogram interval during pacing at one rate, yet be
constantly captured from another direction with a different constant
stimulus-to-electrogram interval when pacing at a different constant pacing
rate. To test this hypothesis, we studied a group of patients, each with a
representative tachycardia (ventricular tachycardia, circus-movement
tachycardia involving an atrioventricular bypass pathway, atrial
tachycardia, and atrial flutter). For each tachycardia, pacing was
performed from a single site for at least two different constant rates
faster than the spontaneous rate of the tachycardia. We observed in these
patients that a local bipolar recording site was constantly captured from
different directions at two different pacing rates without interrupting the
tachycardia at pacing termination. The evidence that the same site was
captured from a different direction at two different pacing rates was
supported by demonstrating a change in conduction time to that site
associated with a change in the bipolar electrogram morphology at that site
when comparing pacing at each rate. The mean conduction time
(stimulus-to-recording site electrogram interval) was 319 +/- 69 msec while
pacing at a mean cycle length of 265 +/- 50 msec, yet only 81 +/- 38 msec
while pacing at a second mean cycle length of 233 +/- 51 msec, a mean
change in conduction time of 238 +/- 56 msec. Remarkably, the faster pacing
rate resulted in a shorter conduction time. The fact that the same
electrode recording site was activated from different directions without
interruption of the spontaneous tachycardia at pacing termination is
difficult to explain on any mechanistic basis other than reentry. Also,
these changes in conduction time and electrogram morphology occurred in
parallel with the demonstration of progressive fusion beats on the
electrocardiogram, the latter being an established criterion for transient
entrainment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
ARTICLES
A fourth criterion for transient entrainment: the electrogram equivalent of progressive fusion
Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.
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