To examine the origin of digitalis-induced ventricular tachycardia (VT), acetyl strophanthidin (AS) (25 mug/min) was perfused into a limited zone of myocardium in intact anesthetized dogs through a catheter placed fluoroscopically in the left anterior descending artery without ischemia. A second catheter in the great cardiac vein sampled venous effluent from this region. His and left bundle branch depolarizations were recorded and bipolar intramural electrograms from endocardial and epicardial sites within the anterior descending region were obtained. No conduction alterations preceded arrhythmia. Cardiac venous K+ rose from 3.3 +/- to 4.4 +/- 0.2 meq/liter (P less than 0.001), indicating egress from the perfused zone. 10 animals (Group 1) were sacrificed 2 min after onset of VT while 11 (Group 2) continued until fibrillation (4-14 min). All showed normal (endocardial leads to epicardial) transmural depolarization during sinus rhythm, but 10/21 demonstrated reversal, usually late during VT, including 8/11 in Group 2. Epicardial activation preceded fascicular activation and QRS. Recordings from the border and circumflex regions in 10 additional dogs (Group 3) demonstrated activation reversal only in the border zone. Myocardial K+ was reduced (mean 63 +/- 1 mueq/g) and Na+ increased (mean 41 +/- 2 mueq/g) in the perfused zone (nonperfused circumflex area K+ 72 +/- 1, Na+ 33 +/- 1 mueq/g, P less than 0.001 for both); changes were similar in inner and outer ventricular wall. In related experiments, subepicardial injections of AS induced activation reversal within the immediate area, similar to recordings during coronary infusion. Reversed transmural activation with early epicardial depolarization suggest VT arises within myocardium; electrolyte gradients between adjacent regions may be causative.
P O Ettinger, J Calabro, T J Regan, H A Oldewurtel
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
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Digoxin-Induced ventricular arrhythmias in the guinea pig heart in vivo: Evidence for a role of endogenous catecholamines in the genesis of delayed afterdepolarizations and triggered activity
J Xu, CM Hurt, A Pelleg |
Heart and Vessels | 1995 |
Influence of dietary myoinositol on myocardial vulnerability and norepinephrine release in a diabetic animal model
N Al-Adli, R Torres, H Baker, J Patel, M Abdel-Sayed, T Regan |
International Journal of Cardiology | 1993 |
Myocardial inositol and sodium in diabetes
TJ Regan, A Beyer-Mears, R Torres, LD Fusilli |
International Journal of Cardiology | 1992 |
Ventricular Fibrillation II: Progress Report since 1971
B Surawicz |
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 1984 |
Herzrhythmusstörungen
G Breithardt, B Brisse, E Jähnchen, W Kasper, HJ Knieriem, ER von Leitner, B Lüderitz, P Matthiesen, D Mecking, T Meinertz, CN dAlnoncourt, H Nawrath, H Neuss, J Ostermeyer, M Schlepper, L Seipel, G Steinbeck, K Theisen, J Thormann, D Trenk, HA Tritthart |
1983 | |
Voltage-clamp studies of transient inward current and mechanical oscillations induced by ouabain in ferret papillary muscle
HS Karagueuzian, BG Katzung |
The Journal of Physiology | 1982 |
Differing Sensitivities of Purkinje Fibers and Myocardium to Inhibition of Monovalent Cation Transport by Digitalis
JC Somberg, WH Barry, TW Smith |
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1981 |
Progression of myocardial abnormalities in experimental alcoholism
G Thomas, B Haider, HA Oldewurtel, MM Lyons, CK Yeh, TJ Regan |
The American Journal of Cardiology | 1980 |
Effects of inotropic and arrhythmogenic digoxin doses and of digoxin-specific antibody on myocardial monovalent cation transport in the dog
TJ Hougen, BL Lloyd, TW Smith |
Circulation research | 1979 |