Literature DB >> 16945799

Monophasic action potentials and activation recovery intervals as measures of ventricular action potential duration: experimental evidence to resolve some controversies.

Ruben Coronel1, Jacques M T de Bakker, Francien J G Wilms-Schopman, Tobias Opthof, André C Linnenbank, Charly N Belterman, Michiel J Janse.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Activation recovery intervals (ARIs) and monophasic action potential (MAP) duration are used as measures of action potential duration in beating hearts. However, controversies exist concerning the correct way to record MAPs or calculate ARIs. We have addressed these issues experimentally.
OBJECTIVES: To experimentally address the controversies concerning the correct way to record MAPs or calculate ARIs.
METHODS: Left ventricular local electrograms were recorded in isolated pig hearts with an exploring electrode grid, with a KCl reference electrode on the left ventricular myocardium, the aortic root, or the left atrium. Local activation was determined from calculated Laplacian electrograms.
RESULTS: With the KCl electrode on the aortic root, local electrograms represented local activation. However, with the KCl electrode on the myocardium remote from the exploring electrode, a combined electrogram emerged consisting of local activation recorded from the grid and remote activation recorded from the reference electrode. The remote, inverted monophasic component did not show propagation and did not correlate with the Laplacian complex. When the KCl electrode was placed on the atrium during AV block, remote atrial monophasic components were completely dissociated from local, ventricular deflections. At left ventricular sites with a positive T wave, the Laplacian signal showed that the end of the T wave was caused by remote repolarization. During cooling-induced regional action potential prolongation, the T wave became negative, whereby the positive flank of the T wave remained correlated with repolarization (recorded with a MAP at the same site).
CONCLUSIONS: MAPs are recorded from the depolarizing electrode. In both negative and positive T waves, the moment of maximum dV/dt corresponds to local repolarization.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16945799     DOI: 10.1016/j.hrthm.2006.05.027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart Rhythm        ISSN: 1547-5271            Impact factor:   6.343


  53 in total

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4.  M cells in the human heart.

Authors:  Charles Antzelevitch
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5.  Electrical and Structural Substrate of Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy Determined Using Noninvasive Electrocardiographic Imaging and Late Gadolinium Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

Authors:  Christopher M Andrews; Neil T Srinivasan; Stefania Rosmini; Heerajnarain Bulluck; Michele Orini; Sharon Jenkins; Antonis Pantazis; William J McKenna; James C Moon; Pier D Lambiase; Yoram Rudy
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6.  Cardiac electrophysiological substrate underlying the ECG phenotype and electrogram abnormalities in Brugada syndrome patients.

Authors:  Junjie Zhang; Frédéric Sacher; Kurt Hoffmayer; Thomas O'Hara; Maria Strom; Phillip Cuculich; Jennifer Silva; Daniel Cooper; Mitchell Faddis; Mélèze Hocini; Michel Haïssaguerre; Melvin Scheinman; Yoram Rudy
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9.  The Electrophysiological Substrate of Early Repolarization Syndrome: Noninvasive Mapping in Patients.

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Review 10.  Noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging of arrhythmogenic substrates in humans.

Authors:  Yoram Rudy
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2013-03-01       Impact factor: 17.367

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