Postoperative atrioventricular nodal (AVN) function was compared in 55 patients with normal and 50 patients with impaired sinus node (SN) function after cardiac transplantation (corrected SN recovery time > 520 msec or sinus arrest +/- escape rhythm). Fifty-two patients had fixed atrial pacing at cycle lengths between 600 and 430 msec, and 53 patients at cycle lengths from 600 to 300 msec between postoperative weeks 1 to 3. Relative (stimulus-R interval; AVNRRP) and effective AVN refractory period (AVNERP) were determined in 53 patients at a cycle length of 500 msec. Only one of 105 recipients had high degree AVN conduction disturbance characterized by a Wenckebach phenomenon at cycle length < 630 msec in the first postoperative week. Three patients with normal and two patients with impaired SN function had Wenckebach cycle lengths > 430 msec while the Wenckebach cycle lengths were < or = 430 msec in the remainder (p = NS). Resting PQ interval (146 +/- 18 vs 162 +/- 32; p = 0.09), Wenckebach cycle length (350 +/- 53 vs 362 +/- 50 msec), AVNRRP (356 +/- 38 vs 367 +/- 37 msec), and AVNERP (217 +/- 48 vs 244 +/- 49 msec) did not differ significantly between patients with normal and impaired SN function. AVN conduction did not deteriorate during 318 +/- 130 days of follow-up (PQ at follow-up 154 +/- 17 and 158 +/- 22 msec, patients with normal and impaired SN function, respectively). One DDD pacemaker was placed for AVN conduction disturbance while 22 pacemakers were implanted for SN deficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-8191.1993.tb00386.xDOI Listing

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