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on May 28, 2002

Circulation. 2002
Published online before print May 28, 2002, doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000019407.35848.AF
A more recent version of this article appeared on June 25, 2002
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Submitted on January 21, 2002
Revised on April 11, 2002
Accepted on April 11, 2002

Polymorphic Reentrant Ventricular Tachycardia in the Isolated Rabbit Heart Studied by High-Density Mapping

Lucas Boersma MD, PhD, Zoltan Zetelaki MSc, Josep Brugada MD, PhD, and Maurits Allessie MD, PhD*

From the Physiology Department, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands, and the Arrhythmia Section, Cardiovascular Institute, Hospital Clínic, Barcelona, Spain (J.B.).

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: M.Allessie{at}fys.unimaas.nl.

Background—The role of dispersion of refractoriness and reentry for the genesis of polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT) has recently become emphasized. We investigated the mechanisms of polymorphic arrhythmias in a 2D preparation confining an area of prolonged refractoriness.

Methods and Results—In 16 Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts, a sheet of left ventricular epicardium was obtained by a cryoprocedure. Enhanced spatial heterogeneity in a refractory period was created by cooling a central region (diameter=12 mm). This markedly prolonged the refractory period (by 36±14 ms) inside but only slightly prolonged it (by 5±11 ms) outside the cooled area (n=6). During a control procedure, programmed stimulation with up to 3 premature stimuli induced an episode of monomorphic VT in only 1 of 10 hearts. During regional cooling, episodes of polymorphic VT with a maximum duration of 35 seconds could be induced in all hearts. High-resolution mapping (229 electrodes) of epicardial activation revealed that polymorphic VT was caused by a functional reentrant circuit located partially within the region of prolonged refractoriness. The reentrant wavefront was continuously shifting along the border of the cooled region, resulting in beat-to-beat changes in the excitation pattern. Spontaneous termination of polymorphic VT occurred either by a shift of the reentrant circuit outside the cooled region or by a block in the central common pathway during figure-of-8 reentry in the region of prolonged refractoriness.

Conclusions—A shifting functional reentrant circuit was the underlying mechanism of polymorphic VT in a substrate of enhanced spatial heterogeneity of refractoriness.


Key words: tachycardia • reentry • anisotropy • torsade de pointes




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