Abstract

Exercising horses uniquely accommodate 7–8-fold increases in heart rate (HR). The present experiments for the first time analysed the related adaptations in action potential (AP) restitution properties recorded by in vivo telemetric electrocardiography from Thoroughbred horses. The horses were subjected to a period of acceleration from walk to canter. The QRS durations, and QT and TQ intervals yielded AP conduction velocities, AP durations (APDs) and diastolic intervals respectively. From these, indices of active, λ = QT/(QRS duration), and resting, λ0 = TQ/(QRS duration), AP wavelengths were calculated. Critical values of QT and TQ intervals, and of λ and λ0 at which plots of these respective pairs of functions showed unity slope, were obtained. These were reduced by 38.9±2.7% and 86.2±1.8%, and 34.1±3.3% and 85.9±1.2%, relative to their resting values respectively. The changes in λ were attributable to falls in QT interval rather than QRS duration. These findings both suggested large differences between the corresponding critical (129.1±10.8 or 117.4±5.6 bpm respectively) and baseline HRs (32.9±2.1 (n = 7) bpm). These restitution analyses thus separately identified concordant parameters whose adaptations ensure the wide range of HRs over which electrophysiological activation takes place in an absence of heart block or arrhythmias in equine hearts. Since the horse is amenable to this in vivo electrophysiological analysis and displays a unique wide range of heart rates, it could be a novel cardiac electrophysiology animal model for the study of sudden cardiac death in human athletes.

Highlights

  • It is widely established that exercise improves health outcomes, such as by reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease [1]

  • Normal PQRST complexes were observed at all heart rate (HR) studied

  • The ECG waveforms showed evidence of accommodation to increasing HRs and their consequent falls in basic cycle lengths (BCLs)

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Summary

Introduction

It is widely established that exercise improves health outcomes, such as by reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease [1]. Exercise has paradoxically been associated with an increased risk for cardiac events in a small number of individuals [2]. The highest risk for exercise-related sudden cardiac death (SCD) occurs in athletes with quiescent cardiovascular defects [3]. SCD remains the most common medical cause for sudden. Veterinary Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Surrey, provided travel and subsistence funding for KJ to undertake the experiments. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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