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Stellate ganglion stimulation causes spatiotemporal changes in ventricular repolarization in pig
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrthm.2019.12.022Abstract
Background
Dispersion in ventricular repolarization is relevant for arrhythmogenesis.Objective
The purpose of this study was to determine the spatiotemporal effects of sympathetic stimulation on ventricular repolarization.Methods
In 5 anesthetized female open-chest pigs, ventricular repolarization was measured from the anterior, lateral, and posterior walls of the left ventricle (LV) and right ventricle using up to 40 transmural plunge needles (4 electrodes each) before and after left stellate ganglion stimulation (LSGS) and right stellate ganglion stimulation. In addition, LSGS was performed in 3 pigs (2 male, 1 female) before and after verapamil (5-10 mg/h) administration.Results
LSGS yielded a biphasic response in repolarization in the lateral and posterior walls of the LV, with prolongation at ∼5 seconds (10 ± 1.5 ms) and shortening at 20-30 seconds of stimulation (-28.9 ± 4.4 ms) during a monotonic pressure increase. While the initial prolongation was abolished by verapamil, late shortening was augmented. Sequential transections of the vagal nerve and stellate ganglia augmented repolarization dispersion responses to LSGS in 2 of 5 hearts. An equal pressure increase by aortic occlusion resulted in a homogeneous shortening of repolarization in the LV, and the effects were smaller than those during LSGS. Right stellate stimulation shortened repolarization mainly in the anterior LV wall, but the effects were smaller than those of LSGS.Conclusion
LSGS first prolongs (through the L-type calcium current) and then shortens repolarization. The effect of LSGS was prominent in the posterior and lateral, not the anterior, LV walls.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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