Abstract

We evaluated the hemodynamic impact of right ventricular pacing at different stimulation frequencies. Fourteen patients with a right ventricular pacemaker (VVI pacing with retrograde P wave) but without clinical and electrocardiographic evidence of coronary artery disease underwent two equilibrium radionuclide angiographies: one under low heart rate (50/60 beats per minute) and the other under fast heart rate (90/100 beats per minute). Left ventricular global and sectorial ejection fractions, amplitude and phase images of first harmonic, and sectorial phases of left ventricle were analyzed. In twelve patients (84.7%), sectorial ejection fraction abnormalities in the left ventricular apicoseptal and inferoapical regions were observed under low heart rate, and worsened under fast heart rate, while new onset sectorial ejection fraction abnormalities under fast heart rate were observed in the other two patients with normal sectorial ejection fraction under low heart rate. Sectorial ejection fractions of left ventricular apicoseptal and inferoapical regions significantly changed between low and high heart rate (- 14.1 +/- 3.8%, p < 0.005; - 7.5 +/- 2.4%, p < 0.01 respectively). Left ventricular sectorial phases were abnormal in only two patients (14.3%) under low heart rate, and in twelve patients (84.7%) under fast heart rate. Our study confirms that left ventricular regional wall motion abnormalities during VVI pacing significantly worsen under fast heart rate in comparison to those under low heart rate.

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