Abstract

Fourteen men with intermittent ventricular bigeminy were selected for this study because coupling intervals of the extrasystoles were considerably long and usually fixed, and bradycardia-dependent (10 cases) and/or tachycardia-dependent (12 cases) termination of bigeminy occurred. In all cases, when the heart rate ranged between two certain values, ventricular bigeminy with fixed-coupled extrasystoles was sustained. In all cases showing bradycardia-dependent termination, bigeminy was suddenly terminated with no changes in coupling of the preceding extrasystoles when the heart rate was decreased below a certain lower value. In all cases showing tachycardia-dependent termination except one, when the heart rate increased beyond a certain higher value, coupling intervals gradually lengthened until bigeminy was terminated. These findings strongly suggest the possibility that, in a considerably large number of clinical cases, ventricular extrasystoles with fixed coupling are caused by longitudinal dissociation of conduction in the reentrant pathway of extrasytoles.

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