Transmural action potential repolarization heterogeneity develops postnatally in the rabbit.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
INTRODUCTION: In the hereditary long QT syndrome, arrhythmia risk changes with age despite the presence of an ion channel mutation throughout development. Age-dependent changes in the transmural dispersion of repolarization may modulate this vulnerability. We recorded cardiac action potentials in infant, periadolescent, and adult rabbit myocardium to determine if transmural heterogeneities in repolarization are developmentally determined. METHODS AND RESULTS: Arterially perfused ventricular preparations were studied from 2-week (n = 7), 7-week (n = 7), and adult (n = 6) NZW rabbits. Action potentials were recorded with microelectrodes in five regions: epicardium (epi), subepicardium (subepi), midwall (mid), subendocardium (subendo), and endocardium (endo) during endocardial S1 pacing at cycle lengths of 2,000, 1,000, and 500 ms. At 2 weeks, the transmural APD90 profile was flat. With age, APD prolongation from subepi to endo created a transmural repolarization gradient. At 7 weeks, APD90 was significantly longer at subendo [204 +/- 2 ms (mean +/- SE) 2,000-ms cycle length, P < 0.05] vs both endo (193 +/- 2 ms) and epi (172 +/- 2 ms), causing a heterogeneous transmural APD90 gradient. In adults, the transmural gradient was a smooth continuum such that APD was shortest in epicardium and longest in endocardium. CONCLUSION: The transmural distribution of APD is developmentally determined. Tissue-specific age-dependent changes in APD can result in transmural repolarization heterogeneity. These age-related effects may modulate arrhythmia vulnerability during development.
Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Idriss, SF; Wolf, PD
Published Date
- July 1, 2004
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 15 / 7
Start / End Page
- 795 - 801
PubMed ID
- 15250865
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 1045-3873
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1046/j.1540-8167.2004.03622.x
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- United States