Abstract

The QT interval (QTI) has long been useful as a clinical index of the duration of ventricular repolarization, particularly as a marker of prolonged repolarization and its well-established association with arrhythmogenic cardiac states. Likewise, inhomogeneity (dispersion) of repolarization has been linked definitively to increased susceptibility to reentrant arrhythmias. Recent studies have reported the use of QTI dispersion as a meaningful clinical index to identify patients at risk, but the interpretation of the measurement has been controversial. A Langendorff-perfused, isolated canine heart suspended in a torso-shaped, electrolytic tank filled with NaCl-sucrose solution was used to investigate the relationship between body surface QTIs and ventricular repolarization measured directly from the cardiac surface by using activation-recovery intervals, which have been documented to reflect the duration of local action potentials as well as local refractory periods. The data showed poor correlation between cardiac surface activation-recovery intervals and QTIs, as well as the insensitivity of QTIs to regional repolarization shortening in the presence of prolonged repolarization elsewhere. Furthermore, the data confirmed that torso tank QTI dispersion does not reflect directly the full range of measured ventricular repolarization inhomogeneity. It is concluded that body surface QTI dispersion is not a reliable index of repolarization dispersion.

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