Circulation, Vol 70, 495-505, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
N Takahashi, RF Gilmour Jr and DP Zipes
The purpose of these experiments was to determine whether overdrive
suppression of conduction (OSC), i.e., transient worsening of conduction or
development of atrioventricular block after cessation of rapid pacing,
could be produced in the canine His-Purkinje system damaged by ligation of
the anterior septal coronary artery and to investigate the responsible
mechanism. We found that OSC occurred in vivo after rapid ventricular and
His bundle pacing but not after atrial pacing, and that it occurred in
vitro after rapid pacing from the left bundle branch but not after pacing
from the proximal His bundle. OSC was related to the duration and cycle
length of pacing. Lidocaine increased while verapamil reduced the duration
of OSC in vivo. The mechanism responsible for the unidirectionality of OSC
is not clear but is probably related to the geometry of the
atrioventricular junction and the anterograde versus the retrograde
activation sequence. Changes in regional myocardial blood flow, autonomic
tone, hemodynamic variables, or ventricular function do not appear to be
required to produce OSC, based on the demonstration of the phenomenon in
vitro. The data suggest a time- and rate-dependent change in factors
affecting conduction such as excitability or cell-to-cell coupling,
possibly due to accumulation of intracellular cations such as calcium.
ARTICLES
Overdrive suppression of conduction in the canine His-Purkinje system after occlusion of the anterior septal artery
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