Severe Bradycardia Increases the Incidence and Severity of Torsade de Pointes Arrhythmias by Augmenting Preexistent Spatial Dispersion of Repolarization in the CAVB Dog Model

Publication date

2021-04-26

Authors

Van Weperen, Valerie Y.H.
Dunnink, Albert
Bossu, Alexandre
Beekman, Jet D.M.ISNI 0000000389505445
Meijborg, Veronique M.F.
De Bakker, Jacques M
Coronel, Ruben
Varkevisser, Rosanne
van der Heyden, MAGORCID 0000-0002-4225-7942ISNI 0000000391802748
Vos, M AISNI 0000000395825015

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Abstract

Introduction: Torsade de pointes arrhythmias (TdP) in the chronic atrioventricular block (CAVB) dog model result from proarrhythmic factors, which trigger TdP and/or reinforce the arrhythmic substrate. This study investigated electrophysiological and arrhythmogenic consequences of severe bradycardia for TdP. Methods: Dofetilide (25 μg/kg per 5 min) was administered to eight anesthetized, idioventricular rhythm (IVR) remodeled CAVB dogs in two serial experiments: once under 60 beats per minute (bpm), right ventricular apex paced (RVA60) conditions, once under more bradycardic IVR conditions. Recordings included surface electrocardiogram and short-term variability (STV) of repolarization from endocardial unipolar electrograms. TdP inducibility (three or more episodes within 10 min after start of dofetilide) and arrhythmic activity scores (AS) were established. Mapping experiments in 10 additional dogs determined the effect of lowering rate on STV and spatial dispersion of repolarization (SDR) in baseline. Results: IVR-tested animals had longer baseline RR-interval (1,403 ± 271 ms) and repolarization intervals than RVA60 animals. Dofetilide increased STV similarly under both rhythm strategies. Nevertheless, TdP inducibility and AS were higher under IVR conditions (6/8 and 37 ± 27 vs. 1/8 and 8 ± 12 in RVA60, respectively, both p < 0.05). Mapping: Pacing from high (128 ± 10 bpm) to middle (88 ± 10 bpm) to experimental rate (61 ± 3 bpm) increased all electrophysiological parameters, including interventricular dispersion, due to steeper left ventricular restitution curves, and intraventricular SDR: maximal cubic dispersion from 60 ± 14 (high) to 69 ± 17 (middle) to 84 ± 22 ms (p < 0.05 vs. high and middle rate). Conclusion: In CAVB dogs, severe bradycardia increases the probability and severity of arrhythmic events by heterogeneously causing electrophysiological instability, which is mainly reflected in an increased spatial, and to a lesser extent temporal, dispersion of repolarization.

Keywords

arrhythmogenesis, CAVB dog model, severe bradycardia, spatial dispersion of repolarization, sudden cardiac death, temporal dispersion of repolarization, Torsade de Pointes, Physiology, Physiology (medical)

Citation

van Weperen, V Y H, Dunnink, A, Bossu, A, Beekman, J D M, Meijborg, V M F, de Bakker, J M T, Coronel, R, Varkevisser, R, van der Heyden, M A G & Vos, M A 2021, 'Severe Bradycardia Increases the Incidence and Severity of Torsade de Pointes Arrhythmias by Augmenting Preexistent Spatial Dispersion of Repolarization in the CAVB Dog Model', Frontiers in Physiology, vol. 12, 642083, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.642083