Abstract

It is suggested that torsades de pointes may be only one of a group of arrhythmias that are characterized by being pause induced or bradycardia induced. A distinction is made between the cause of the "twisting of the points" and the cause of the action potentials that initiate and sustain the tachycardia. It is pointed out that torsades de pointes and other pause-induced arrhythmias share many features with rhythmic activity arising from early afterdepolarizations. Both are seen after pauses or at low rates, both are seen in quinidine intoxication, and both are seen in hypokalemia. The short-long-short sequence that is seen in torsades de pointes and certain other pause- or bradycardia-induced arrhythmias can be fully explained by the behavior of rhythmic activity initiated and sustained by early afterdepolarizations, as can the abrupt onset and termination of pause-induced arrhythmias and their tendency to show initial warming up and terminal slowing down.

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