Abstract

Signs of sympathetic activation are frequent during the early hours of anterior wall acute myocardial infarction, whereas parasympathetic reflexes predominate in inferior wall acute myocardial infarction. To assess the immediate autonomic responses to acute coronary occlusion, the high-requency power and root-mean-square successive difference, frequency and time domain measures of heart rate (HR) variability were analyzed in 73 cases of significant (50 to 95%) coronary artery stenosis immediately before and during balloon occlusion (mean 99 seconds). The range of nonspecific changes was formed on the basis of a control group with no ischemia during dilatations of 16 totally occluded coronary arteries. Balloon occlusion of the left anterior descending artery (n = 35) caused an abnormal increase in the measures of HR variability as a sign of vagal activation in 8 patients (23%), and a significant decrease in HR variability in 4 (11%). Occlusion of the left circumflex artery (n = 19) caused an increase in HR variability in 5 patients (26%), and a decrease in 2 (11%). Right coronary artery occlusion (n = 19) caused an increase in HR variability in 5 patients (26%) and a decrease in 4 (21%). Thus, coronary occlusion causes immediate changes in HR variability in greater than one third of patients with coronary artery disease. The direction of these initial HR variability changes cannot be predicted by the site of coronary occlusion.

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