Abstract

Effects of mild hyperkalemia on conduction velocity, effective refractory periods (ERPs) and sinus rate were studied on 16 anesthetized dogs, using endocavitary His bundle recordings, the extrastimulus method and standard electrocardiogram. Six dogs were placed under acetylcholine infusion (300 micrograms/kg/min) (ACh group), 10 received atropine sulfate 0.2 mg/kg intravenously (atropine group). Intraventricular conduction time, ventricular ERP and QRS duration of the EKG were studied on 7 other open-chested dogs (ventricular group). During a 60 min potassium chloride infusion (0.025 mmol/kg/min, 30 min, then 0.05 mmol/kg/min, 30 min), following observations were made: - In the ACh group, AV node conduction time (A-H interval) decreased by 20% and AV node ERP by 17%, whereas, in the atropine group, the former parameter was not affected and atrial ERP increased by 29%. - At the same time, sinus rate increased in the ACh group and was unaffected in the atropine group. - Conduction times in atrial contractile tissue (S-A interval), His-Purkinje system (H-V interval) and ventricular contractile tissue, like ventricular ERP, exhibited no variation or very slight, occasionally biphasic variations under both conditions. These results can be accounted for by an "anticholinergic" effect of mild hyperkalemia which is discussed.

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