| Literature DB >> 1394883 |
R B Schuessler1, T M Grayson, B I Bromberg, J L Cox, J P Boineau.
Abstract
Cholinergic agonists and vagal stimulation potentiate the inducibility of atrial fibrillation. To describe the activation patterns and determine the mechanisms that sustain cholinergic fibrillation, tachyarrhythmias were induced with a single extrastimulus in the isolated Krebs-Henseleit-perfused canine right atrium (n = 11) at increasing concentrations of acetylcholine (from 10(-7.5) to 10(-4.5) M). Bipolar electrograms were recorded from 250 epicardial sites simultaneously during control conditions and during extrastimulation (S1S1, 300 msec; S1S2, effective refractory period+5 msec) with and without acetylcholine. Activation sequence maps were constructed from each recording. Without acetylcholine, no tachyarrhythmias were induced. With increasing concentrations of acetylcholine, the refractory period decreased, and nonsustained (< 2 seconds) rapid repetitive responses were induced. At higher concentrations, a sustained (> 2-minute) fibrillation was induced. Activation sequence maps revealed that the rapid repetitive responses were characterized by multiple reentrant circuits. The number of circuits and wavelets increased in a dose-dependent fashion. However, unexpectedly, this trend did not continue when the tachyarrhythmia became sustained. Instead, the reentry tended to stabilize to a small, single, relatively stable reentrant circuit. In conclusion, the data suggest that, in this model, below a critical level of refractory period (< 95 msec) atrial reentrant circuits, unassociated with anatomic obstacles, can become stable and dominate activation.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1394883 DOI: 10.1161/01.res.71.5.1254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circ Res ISSN: 0009-7330 Impact factor: 17.367