Articles |
From the Departments of Internal Medicine and Radiology, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Md.
Correspondence to Dr Ronald D. Berger, Carnegie 592, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, 600 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21287.
Abstract The mechanism of diastolic pressure elevation induced by acute rapid pacing in pressure-load hypertrophied left ventricles (LVs) remains incompletely understood. It has been ascribed to abnormalities of coronary flow, metabolism, and calcium cycling. However, rapid pacing also alters the timing of atrial and ventricular stimulation relative to the diastolic filling period, and this could also influence diastolic pressures. To test the role of such mechanical factors, LV pressure-volume hemodynamics were measured in closed-chested anesthetized dogs during and after abrupt cessation of rapid atrial pacing. Twenty-one dogs were studied: 6 dogs with LV hypertrophy (LVH) induced by perinephritic hypertension, 5 sham-operated normotensive dogs, and 10 acute normotensive control dogs. In LVH dogs, but not in sham-operated or control dogs, end-diastolic pressure rose progressively with increasing heart rate from 5.6±3.1 mm Hg at baseline to 22.6±8.1 mm Hg at 220 beats per minute. In all hearts, rapid pacing shifted the timing of left atrial contraction so that it occurred near the onset of LV filling rather than at end diastole. However, in LVH hearts, early LV diastolic pressure and peak atrial pressure were also markedly elevated. Most striking, immediately after terminating the pacing, diastolic pressure declined to near baseline. This rapid pressure decline occurred just when atrial systole would have ensued and before ventricular activation would have followed had pacing continued. Thus, diastolic pressure elevation resolved before a change in ventricular pacing rate. The role of atrial contraction was further explored by simultaneous atrioventricular pacing. This shifted the time of atrial systole so that it occurred during LV isovolumic contraction, while maintaining the identical LV pacing rate. This change eliminated the diastolic pressure elevation found previously. Further analysis revealed that the pressure increase during rapid pacing was not due simply to partial LV filling imposed on a relaxing ventricle or to hypertension or an intact pericardium. These data indicate that mechanical effects of atrioventricular interaction play an important role in tachycardia-induced diastolic dysfunction in this model of LVH and can be more causative than ischemia or metabolic factors in this setting.
Key Words: hypertrophy tachycardia diastole left atrium hypertension
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