Programmed stimulation was alternatively performed exclusively from the right ventricular endocardium, exclusively from the left ventricular epicardium and simultaneously from both ventricles in 8 patients who did not have coronary artery disease or bundle branch block. A specially constructed QRS triggered pacemaker, (with a refractory period of 260 msec and an escape interval of 800 msec) connected to the right ventricular and left ventricular electrodes, was used to perform simultaneous biventricular stimulation. The latter had no untoward effects and was not more dangerous than exclusive right ventricular, or exclusive left ventricular, stimulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHis bundle and right ventricular apical electrograms were recorded in 18 patients with acute transmural myocardial infarction in whom catheter insertion was considered necessary for clinical reasons. The V-RVA and H-V intervals were of normal duration (5 to 30 and 35 to 55 msec, respectively) in five patients (Group 1) with persistently narrow (less than 100 msec) QRS complexes. In contrast, 13 patients (Group 2) who manifested a "complete" right bundle branch block pattern within 96 hours after admission had prolonged V-RVA intervals (range 50 to 80 msec, mean 59.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the long-term effects of membrane-active antiarrhythmic agents on chronic ventricular arrhythmias in patients who have survived prehospital cardiac arrest. Among 16 patients treated with a dose-adjusted, plasma level-monitored antiarrhythmic regimen, eight have survived for longer than 12 months and eight have had recurrent cardiac arrests (RCAs). Monthly Holter monitor tapes (HM) recorded during the 4 months before the eight RCAs were compared with monthly HM tapes matched for time of entry and duration of follow-up in the eight patients who did not have RCAs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeventy cases of congential heart disease including the most frequent types were studied, and wedge hepatic venous pressure (WHVP) was measured in each. The mean pressure was determined in the "jammed position" and in the free hepatic veins, inferior vena cava, and low right atrium. The average mean WHVP was 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHis bundle electrograms were recorded during catheter insertion for prophylactic demand pacing in two patients with accelerated or nonaccelerated "atrioventricular (A-V) junctional" rhythms associated with A-V junctional Wenckebach periods. This appears to be the first published report of so-called A-V junctional Wenckebach periods in which the characteristic irregularities of the H-H intervals were recorded. Patient 1 had an additional area of "complete" anterograde A-V nodal (A-H) block.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe data of 6 patients in whom a left anterior hemiblock appeared in the course of angina pectoris attacks were reviewed. All 6 patients were found to fulfill the criteria for unstable angina. 1 patient who presented the features of Prinzmetal variant angina was included in this group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPacing Clin Electrophysiol
March 1979
A case is described in which ventricular pacing from the middle cardiac vein produced an electrocardiographic pattern which mimicked the morphology of the normally conducted beats. The possible etiologies of this unusual phenomenon and its implications concerning the functional anatomy of the normal conduction system in the human heart are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF6 clinically normal subjects underwent a 3-month physical conditioning program with the ejection fractions determined before and after physical conditioning using a scintillation probe. All subjects achieved a conditioning effect as evidenced by increased treadmill test duration after conditioning (mean duration before conditioning: 658 vs. 715 sec after conditioning; p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of rapid external chest wall stimulation were evaluated in 10 patients with normally-operating unipolar, lithium-powered, QRS-inhibited pacemakers functioning in their control VVI (QRS-inhibited) mode. Stimuli delivered at slow rates resulted in the expected pacemaker inhibition. On the other hand, during rapid (greater than 900/min) external chest wall stimulation, 8 pacemakers reverted to a VOO mode, 1 to a VVI mode and 1 to either a VVI or VOO mode.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis report described initiation of A-V nodal reentrant tachyycardia in a patient with acute inferior myocardial infarction. The onset of tachycardia was preceded by an abortive A-V nodal Wenckebach periodicity. A-V nodal ischemia with or without vagotonia was implicated as the cause of induction of critical functional dissociation between the two A-V nodal conduction pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe electrocardiographic pattern of pure (without bundle branch block) left anterior hemiblock was found in 20 (7.3%) out of 283 consecutive patients who showed significant coronary artery disease at coronary angiography. The clinical, hemodynamic and angiographic findings of these 20 patients are reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagnet waving was performed in a patient with a normally functioning, program-mable, QRS-inhibited (VVI) pacemaker (Omni-Stanicor, Cordis Corporation), which was implanted for sick sinus syndrome. This procedure resulted in reversion to an asynchronous, nonsensing (irregular VOO) mode of operation with uneven stimulus-to-stimulus intervals. A short run of ventricular tachycardia occurred when a stimulus fell on the T wave of the preceding ectopic ventricular beat.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculation
November 1978
In the course of electrophysiological evaluation of six patients with sick sinus syndrome, two patients with chronic conduction system disease and four patients with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia or atrial flutter-fibrillation, the phenomenon of concealed conduction within the atrium (At) was repeatedly observed. One pair of intracardiac electrodes was used to deliver electrical stimulus (St) to the high right At and two additional pairs of electrodes were utilized to record high right and low septal right atrial electrograms. The interelectrode distances were 10 mm apart.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn two infants with Wolff-Parkinson-White type B, right bundle branch block was concealed during sinus rhythm and pacing from close to the atrial entrance of the right-sided accessory pathway. However, pacing from the vicinity of the A-V node, the A-V node itself, and the His bundle exposed the right bundle branch block by producing exclusive ventricular activation through the normal, A-V nodal His-Purkinje pathway. In addition, pacing from close to the A-V node also resulted in fusion beats characterized by absence of delta waves with (pseudo) normal QRS complexes and short H-V intervals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtrioventricular nodal alternating Wenckebach periods ending in 5:1 atrioventricular block occurring during rapid atrial rhythms were explained by postulating the presence of block in three levels of the atrioventricular node. This pattern of conduction occurred in ten of 11 patients who either had received ouabain or verapamil (nine patients) or who had organic atrioventricular nodal disease (two patients). In contrast, this pattern of conduction occurred in only one of eight nonmedicated patients without organic atrioventricular nodal disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis report presents, for the first time, clear evidence supporting the occurrence of Wenckebach and 2:1 H-V block during His bundle pacing. The simultaneous recording of various intracardiac electrograms, as well as the comparison of the effects produced by selective His bundle pacing and high right atrial pacing at the same rates, permitted the identification of conduction disturbances located distal to the paced His bundle site. This could be done although one criterion usually required to diagnose selective His bundle pacing (namely, stimulus-V intervals of constant duration) was not present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe various patterns resulting from stimulation through the catheter electrodes recording His bundle activity were evaluated in 30 patients using intracardiac electrograms from the right ventricular apex (RVA), posterosuperior wall of the left ventricle (LV), high right atrium (HRA) and left atrium (LA) in the vicinity of the coronary sinus. His bundle pacing was characterized by a QRS complex and stimulus (St)-V, St-RVA and St-LV intervals that equated the QRS configuration, H-V, H-RVA and H-LV intervals of sinus beats. Right septal pacing produced pattern of "complete" left bundle branch block (with normal electrical axis) associated with St-V intervals of 0 msec, and St-RVA and St-LV intervals of different duration from that of the H-RVA and H-LV intervals recorded during sinus rhythm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPacing Clin Electrophysiol
April 1978
In the evaluation of twenty-three patients with implanted QRS-inhibited lithium-powered pulse generators (Intermedics C-MOS-1 and ARCO L1-2D), we repeatedly observed the phenomenon of partial pacemaker recycling (PPR), in which the escape interval induced by a premature ventricular beat is shorter than the automatic interval (AI). In order to determine the sensing properties of these pulse generators, programmed chest wall stimulation (CWS) was systematically performed in all 23 patients and, in addition, intracardiac programmed ventricular stimulation (PVS) via temporary intravenous pacing catheters was performed in 9 of them. The AI of these pulse generators ranged from 820 to 860 msec and absolute refractory periods (ARP) from 220 to 330 msec.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntra-atrial Wenckebach patterns of stimulus-to-response intervals coexisting with distal, A-V nodal, and His-Purkinje, blocks occurred in eight patients during high right atrial stimulation at rapid rates. In two patients with 2:1 St-H block and in two patients with 4:1 St-V block, an increase in the degree of block occurred when the proximal intra-atrial Wenckebach cycle was completed with the stimulus which otherwise would have been propagated to the distal levels. However, the degree of block did not increase when the intra-atrial Wenckebach terminated in distally blocked stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrocardiograms, vectorcardiograms and His bundle electrograms were recorded in a patient with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (type A) who developed complete infra-Hisian block and advanced A-V block in the Kent bundle. The atrial impulses reaching the ventricles exclusively through the Kent bundle produced QRS complexes and vector loops showing diffuse (leftward initial and rightward pre-terminal) delays and slurrings. These abnormalities were not due to Wolff-Parkinson-White type A coexisting with right bundle branch block, but reflected the activation sequence characteristic of arrival of excitation; spontaneous impulse formation; or electrical stimulation, at the postero-superior wall of the left ventricle.
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