Atrial rhythm during ventricular fibrillation in the dog
Publication date
1976-01
Authors
Scher, A.M.
Heethaar, R.M.
Zimmerman, A.N.E.
Meijler, F.L.
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DOI
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Depolarization of the atrioventricular junctional tissues and of the atrial septum was examined in the perfused dog heart before and during ventricular fibrillation by (I) recording the potentials from the junctional tissues in the regions of the interatrial and interventricular septum and examining the relationship of activity at these sites to atrial depolarization, (2) computing histograms and autocorrelograms
of atrial firing intervals to study atrial rhythmicity, and (3) plotting the sequence of atrial septal depolarization. The junctional tissue was gene rally randomly depolarized by the fibrillating ventricles. The histograms and autocorrelograms indicate that during ventricular fibrillation the atrial depolarization intervals do not remain constant, but vary widely. This seems to be due to the retrograde excitation from the junctional tissues. Plots of the depolarization sequences of the interatrial septum also indicate that retrograde
depolarization takes place. The junctional tissues decrease the number of impulses that can pass from ventric1e to atrium,and they similarly decrease the number of impulses that pass in an antegrade direction during atrial fibrillation.
Keywords
atrial rhythm, ventricular fibrillation, perfused dog heart