Ventricular arrhythmias and local electrograms after chronic regional denervation of the ischemic area in the pig heart
- PMID: 2738265
- DOI: 10.1016/0735-1097(89)90078-8
Ventricular arrhythmias and local electrograms after chronic regional denervation of the ischemic area in the pig heart
Abstract
Cardiac denervation has been proved to reduce the incidence of coronary occlusion arrhythmias in digs, but the effect of limiting the extent of sympathectomy to the ischemic area, particularly in hearts with sparse coronary collateral circulation, as in the human heart, needs further investigation. Ventricular arrhythmias and changes in epicardial direct current electrograms induced during acute left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion were recorded in 14 pigs subjected to regional denervation of the ischemic area 2 weeks before; these were compared with findings in 14 sham-operated control pigs. Regional denervation was induced by pericoronary application of phenol above the occlusion site and it was confirmed by the loss of myocardial catecholamine histofluorescence. During 35 min of ischemia, significant differences in occurrence of ventricular premature beats, ventricular tachycardia, ST segment elevation, TQ segment depression and epicardial activation delays were observed between the two groups of experiments, with lower values of each variable in the denervated hearts. Ventricular fibrillation occurred 32 times in 11 control pigs and only 15 times in eight denervated hearts. In contrast, programmed ventricular extrastimuli delivered during 35 to 50 min of ischemia induced 39 fibrillatory episodes in 13 denervated hearts and only 14 episodes in seven control pigs. Thus, denervation limited to the ischemic area in hearts with a human-like coronary artery pattern was associated with a decrease in the magnitude of early ischemic arrhythmias and electrocardiographic alterations, but the procedure was unable to prevent early induction of ventricular fibrillation.
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