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Human ventricular refractoriness: Effects of increasing current
Authors:Allan M Greenspan  Joseph S Camardo  Leonard N Horowitz  Scott R Spielman  Mark E Josephson
Institution:From the Electrophysiology Laboratory, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Cardiovascular Section, Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA
Abstract:The ventricular effective refractory period is commonly employed as a measurement of ventricular excitability. Because the current strength used to make this determination varies among laboratories, the relation of refractoriness and current was examined over a range of current strengths from 0.1 to 10 mA. Sixty determinations of refractoriness at variable current strengths were made in 40 patients using the extrastimulus technique with a rectangular pulse of 1 ms duration. These data were obtained by measuring the effective refractory period at threshold current and at 0.25 to 0.50 mA increments from threshold up to 10 mA. In these studies the drive stimulus (S1) and extrastimulus (S2) were kept at the same amplitude. In all patients the ventricular effective refractory period decreased as the current increased. The total decrease ranged from 8 to 100 ms (mean ± standard deyiation 36.9 ± 17.1). The current strength at which the ventricular effective refractory period became fixed (that is, less than 2 ms change in ventricular effective refractory period with further increase in current strength) varied among the patients, but in all instances equaled or exceeded 1.8 mA, which in all but three patients was greater than three times threshold. The curves relating current strength and refractoriness were shifted to the left at shorter cycle lengths with no change in threshold.These data suggest that (1) current strength-effective refractory period curves more completely characterize ventricular excitability than does a ventricular effective refractory period at single current strength; and (2) studies of drug effects, alterations of autonomic tone, or reentrant arrhythmias, which may affect or are affected by ventricular refractoriness, may be enhanced by more complete measurements of refractoriness afforded by the current strength-effective refractoriness curves.
Keywords:Address for reprints: Allan M  Greenspan  MD  Electrophysiology Laboratory  Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania  654 Ravdin Building  3400 Spruce Street  Philadelphia  Pennsylvania 19104  
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