Abstract

The activation-recovery interval (ARI), measured directly from the myocardium, has shown a good correlation with the action potential duration (APD) in experiments. APD has been reported to be inversely related to the activation time (AT). However, no studies have examined the correlation between the body-surface ARI and AT in normal subjects. Fifty normal subjects (25 men and 25 women) were studied to elucidate the relationship between the body-surface ARI and AT. The body-surface AT was defined as the duration between the QRS onset and the minimum dV/dt of the QRS wave, and ARI as the interval between the minimum dV/dt of the QRS wave and the maximum dV/dt of the T wave in each lead of an 87 unipolar lead system. We also measured the recovery time (RT) defined as the duration between the QRS onset and the maximum dV/dt of the T wave. ARI was inversely correlated with AT (r = -0.73). RT was also inversely correlated with AT (r = -0.61), however, RT had a less heterogeneous distribution than ARI (148 ms vs 159 ms). There were no differences between male and female subjects in the relation between ARI and RT or in the body-surface distribution of ARI and RT. These findings suggest that the body-surface ARI may reflect recovery properties over the cardiac surface and that APD may distribute inhomogeneously over the human cardiac surface with a longer RT over an area with a shorter AT. ARI calculated from body-surface ECG may be a useful noninvasive and repeatedly measurable estimate of APD.

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