Pacing and clinical electrophysiology : PACE
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Pacing Clin Electrophysiol · Nov 1990
Effects of increasing heart rate induced by efferent sympathetic neuronal stimulation, isoproterenol or cardiac pacing on myocardial function and oxygen utilization.
The effects of increasing heart rate by six different methods on cardiac function were investigated in 17 open-chest anesthetized dogs. Heart rate was increased approximately 30% by (1) right interganglionic nerve stimulation, (2) atrial pacing, (3) ventricular pacing, (4) atrioventricular sequential pacing, (5) right stellate ganglion stimulation, and (6) isoproterenol administration. During heart rate increases induced by atrial pacing left ventricular intramyocardial pressure, coronary blood flow, oxygen delivery per unit of myocardial oxygen consumption, and myocardial efficiency were unchanged. ⋯ Increases in heart rate induced by right interganglionic nerve stimulation did not alter myocardial oxygen consumption, or the index of cardiac efficiency. It is concluded that augmentation of heart rate by either ventricular or atrioventricular pacing impairs myocardial function so that there is a decrease of left ventricular efficiency and isoproterenol augments chronotropism and myocardial force relative to cardiac external work so there is a reduction in cardiac efficiency. In contrast, atrial pacing or right interganglionic nerve stimulation augments chronotropism such that myocardial oxygen consumption and efficiency are unchanged.