Abstract

The purpose of the experiments described in this article was to investigate the effects of overdrive stimulation on functional anisotropic reentrant circuits causing ventricular tachycardia in infarcted canine ventricles. We determined how overdrive stimuli affect reentrant circuits to alter characteristics of the tachycardia. Activation patterns were determined by mapping excitation with a 192 bipolar electrode array. We found that overdrive stimuli could activate the circuits with the same pattern as the reentrant wavefront and that after overdrive stopped either the last or the next to last stimulated wavefront continued propagating through the circuit as a new reentrant impulse and tachycardia continued. When the circuit was not altered after overdrive, the exit route that the stimulated wavefront took from the circuit to activate the rest of the ventricles was also not altered and the tachycardia after overdrive had the same cycle length and QRS morphology as prior to overdrive. In some experiments, however, the overdrive stimuli did not follow the original reentrant pathway but led to the formation of a different circuit with a different exit route to the ventricles. As a result, after overdrive stimulation tachycardia had a different QRS morphology and cycle length than prior to stimulation. When the new circuit after overdrive was small and the revolution time of the reentrant impulse around the circuit was short, fibrillation occurred. Functional reentrant circuits can either be maintained or altered after a period of overdrive stimulation. The results explain many of the effects that have been seen during overdrive stimulation of clinical ventricular tachycardia.

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