Abstract

In 55 patients with persistent sinus bradycardla who underwent an electrophysiologic study of sinus node, both in the basal state and after autonomic blockade (propranolol, 0.2 mg/kg, and atropine, 0.04 mg/kg), an atropine test (0.02 mg/kg) was performed the following day. The 49 patients in whom sinus rate could be evaluated after atropine were subdivided into two groups—group I, 24 patients (age: 54 ± 13 years) with normal intrinsic sinus automaticity (normal intrinsic heart rate and intrinsic corrected sinus node recovery time) and group II, 25 patients (age: 62 ± 9 years) with abnormal intrinsic sinus automaticity. In group I, atropine increased sinus rate from 53.7 ± 4 to 87.9 ± 17 bpm (Δ%: 65.5 ± 33) and in group II from 51.6 ± 5 to 73.9 ± 14 bpm (Δ%: 43.1 ± 26). The discriminant threshold of sinus rate after atropine and its percent increase, obtained by discriminant analysis, was 80 bpm and +52%, respectivoly, with a misleading classification of 32% and 36%, respectively. The overall predictive accuracy of sinus rate after atropine was higher than the percent change in sinus rate (73% and 65%, respectively). These data evidence that the atropine test is not very helpful in discriminating between an organic and an autonomic involvement of sinus automaticity in patients with sinus bradycardia.

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