1 From the Division of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital of Greater Miami, Miami Beach, Florida, and the University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida.
A-V conduction was analyzed in 75 patients (mean age, 73 years) with sinus bradycardia (SB) by His bundle (BH) recordings. Forty-five of these patients had normal QRS complexes ( Our data demonstrate that SB is often (67%) associated with A-V conduction abnormalities. A-V conduction was abnormal in 56% of patients with normal and 83% with abnormal QRS complexes. The ECG and atrial pacing are of limited value in assessing A-V conduction. The BH recordings in symptomatic patients with sinus bradycardia may be of clinical significance in the selection of site for pacemaker implantation, that is, atrial or ventricular.
Submitted on February 18, 1971
© 1971 American Heart Association, Inc.
Atrioventricular Conduction Defects in Patients with Sinus Bradycardia
Analysis by His Bundle Recordings
0.10 sec) and 30 had abnormal QRS complexes (
0.12 sec). The conduction times through the atrium (P-A), A-V node (A-H), and His-Purkinje system (H-V) were measured during normal sinus rhythm and transient right atrial pacing up to rates of 150/min. The normal range of conduction times through various regions is: P-A = 25 to 45 msec; A-H = 50 to 120 msec, and H-V = 35 to 45 msec. Overall A-V conduction was completely normal only in 25 (33%) patients. Of these 25 patients, 20 had a narrow QRS complex and five had an abnormal QRS complex. The remaining 50 patients showed abnormal A-V conduction in one or more regions (P-A in 10, A-H in five, BH in six, H-V in 10, and mixed in 19). In some patients despite normal ECGs, the H-V time was abnormal and 1:1 A-V conduction was present during atrial pacing up to 150/min. An abnormal H-V time in association with a normal QRS complex is suggestive of delay in the His bundle. Fourteen patients were restudied at intervals of 6 months to 2 years. Three of these 14 patients showed prolongation of conduction times over 1
to 2 years.
Key Words: Electrocardiograms Atropine Atrial pacing QRS complexes
Accepted on June 30, 1971
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