Abstract

Myocardial ischemia has been associated with dispersion of ventricular refractory periods and this dispersion has been related to the ventricular arrhythmias seen with coronary occlusion. This study relates the degree of change in measured ventricular refractory period with the degree of regional myocardial blood flow abnormality after coronary occlusion. When regional myocardial blood flow is less than 70 percent of that of nonischemic areas, refractory periods are significantly ( P < 0.001) shortened. The greatest change in refractory periods occurs in areas with a regional myocardial blood flow that is 21 to 40 percent of that of non-ischemic areas. Marked (less than 20 percent) and minimal (61 to 80 percent) reductions in regional myocardial blood flow are associated with less, but still significant, shortening of ventricular refractory periods. Thus dispersion of refractoriness can be related to the inhomogeneity of regional myocardial blood flow after acute coronary occlusion. Interventions designed to salvage ischemic myocardium by increasing regional myocardial blood flow may affect dispersion of ventricular refractory periods in complex and divergent ways.

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