Circulation, Vol 77, 1139-1148, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
The response to overdrive pacing of triggered atrial and ventricular arrhythmias in the canine heart
G Malfatto, TS Rosen and MR Rosen
Department of Pharmacology, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY 10032.
Although triggered activity has been identified in isolated atrial tissue
with the use of cellular electrophysiologic techniques, there has been no
identification of triggered atrial arrhythmias in situ. Moreover, it is
unclear whether triggered rhythms of different causes and sites of origin
in the heart exhibit uniform responses to pacing that might aid in their
identification. We therefore studied arrhythmias induced by overdrive
pacing in three canine preparations, and based the analysis of our results
on guidelines derived from microelectrode studies. We studied ventricular
tachycardias induced by ouabain or by anterior wall myocardial infarction
and atrial (coronary sinus) arrhythmias induced by the infusion of
epinephrine into the great cardiac vein. In the ouabain and postinfarction
preparations, right ventricular epicardial pacing induced ventricular
premature beats or tachycardias whose recovery intervals after cessation of
pacing shortened and showed overdrive acceleration as pacing rate
increased. The first postpacing beat displayed progressive fusion with the
paced beats but transient entrainment could not be induced. In the coronary
sinus, the recovery intervals of impulses induced by epinephrine and pacing
decreased as the drive rate increased, and inducibility of the paced
rhythms increased at faster drive rates. Thus, the recovery intervals of
triggered activity induced in the coronary sinus are phenomenologically
similar to those of infarct- and digitalis-induced triggered rhythms. This
is the first demonstration of consistent behavior in response to pacing of
diverse types of triggered activity. Considered in light of the failure to
induce transient entrainment, the results emphasize the potential utility
of pacing in clinical identification of triggered rhythms and their
differentiation from reentry.