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on June 24, 2002

Circulation. 2002
Published online before print June 24, 2002, doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000022163.24831.B5
A more recent version of this article appeared on July 16, 2002
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Submitted on February 15, 2002
Revised on April 30, 2002
Accepted on May 1, 2002

Effects of Ventricular Premature Stimulus Coupling Interval on Blood Pressure and Heart Rate Turbulence

Mari A. Watanabe MD, PhD*, Joseph E. Marine MD, Robert Sheldon MD, and Mark E. Josephson MD

From the Harvard-Thorndike Institute of Electrophysiology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Mass, and the University of Calgary Health Science Center (R.S.), Calgary, Canada.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mwata001{at}udcf.gla.ac.uk.

Background—Heart rate turbulence (HRT) is a promising noninvasive risk stratifier for mortality after myocardial infarction. On the basis of a study of ventricular premature complex coupling interval and sympathetic nerve burst amplitude, we hypothesized that measures of HRT would increase with increased prematurity of the coupling interval.

Methods and Results—Twenty-eight patients undergoing programmed electrical stimulation were studied (12 with prior myocardial infarction, aged 60±18 years). An extrastimulus was delivered from the right ventricular apex after 20 sinus beats with a V-S2 coupling interval decremented by 20 to 30 ms until refractoriness was reached. Turbulence slope (TS), turbulence timing (TT), and turbulence onset were calculated for each extrastimulus, and the linear regressions of these parameters on coupling interval and compensatory pause were calculated. Arterial blood pressure was measured with arterial catheter or a noninvasive continuous blood pressure transducer (Buffington cuff). TS and turbulence onset were abnormal in 4 and 13 patients, respectively. HRT parameters were significantly correlated with coupling interval or compensatory pause in only 2 or 3 patients for a given regression analysis. This absence of correlation was found likely to be due to lack of correlation between compensatory pause and systolic blood pressure after the compensatory pause. Heart rate and TS were correlated: Patients with high heart rate had low TS and late TT (TS=-2.7+0.01xsinus cycle length, P=0.018; TT=8.8 to 0.005xsinus cycle length, P=0.013).

Conclusions—HRT can be induced by programmed stimulation. In this setting, heart rate affects HRT but not ventricular premature complex prematurity. Induced HRT seems to be a valid method for measuring HRT parameters in patients with few ventricular premature complexes.


Key words: electrophysiology • risk factors • death, sudden




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