(Circulation. 1999;99:143-155.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Basic Science Reports |
From the Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (B.J.S., E.P.) and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center (B.J.S., E.P.), Oklahoma City, Okla.
Correspondence to Eugene Patterson, PhD, Research Service 151-F, DVA Medical Center, 921 NE 13th St, Oklahoma City, OK 73104. E-mail eugene-patterson{at}uokhsc.edu
BackgroundLongitudinal dissociation of an anatomic pathway into 2 electrophysiologically distinct pathways has been hypothesized as a basis for localized AV nodal reentry and supraventricular arrhythmias.
Methods and ResultsExtracellular bipolar and intracellular
microelectrodes were used to record activation in the superfused
rabbit AV junction. A subset of rabbit hearts (n=19 of 72) demonstrated
dissociation of the posterior AV nodal input into
2 functional
pathways. Antegrade AH conduction was maintained by a pathway just
inferior to the tendon of Todaro. Rate-dependent conduction
block was observed in a second pathway just superior to the tricuspid
annulus, allowing retrograde activation of the distal portion of the
inferior posterior AV nodal input and leading to the
formation of apparent "dead-end" pathways. The superior (antegrade)
and inferior (retrograde) pathways were separated by a band
of well-polarized but poorly excitable transitional cells. Additional
decreases in the atrial cycle length progressively increased the AH
interval, further delaying retrograde activation of the
inferior pathway, and progressively moved the site of
conduction block in the inferior pathway proximally, thus
extending the length of the retrograde conduction pathway and allowing
circus movement within the transitional cells of the posterior AV nodal
connection.
ConclusionsLongitudinal dissociation within the posterior AV nodal input can give rise to localized reentry and AV nodal reentrant tachycardia.
Key Words: atrioventricular node arrhythmia tachycardia, atrioventricular nodal reentry action potentials
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