COMPARISON OF ACETYLCHOLINE INFUSION INTO THE SINUS NODE ARTERY WITH ELECTRICAL-STIMULATION OF CARDIAC PARASYMPATHETIC NERVES

Citation
Pl. Page et al., COMPARISON OF ACETYLCHOLINE INFUSION INTO THE SINUS NODE ARTERY WITH ELECTRICAL-STIMULATION OF CARDIAC PARASYMPATHETIC NERVES, Annales de chirurgie, 49(8), 1995, pp. 719-727
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Surgery
Journal title
ISSN journal
00033944
Volume
49
Issue
8
Year of publication
1995
Pages
719 - 727
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-3944(1995)49:8<719:COAIIT>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
Atrial fibrillation occurring after open heart surgery largely depends on heterogeneous dispersion of refractoriness. To investigate the con tribution of the autonomic nervous system in this phenomenon, we studi ed the regional distribution of neurally induced atrial electrophysiol ogical events. Electrical stimulation of the right atrial fat pad, ace tylcholine injection into the sinus node artery, and stimulation of th e right and left vagosympathetic trunks were compared with respect to detailed atrial mapping. Unipolar electrograms were recorded from 127 atrial sites before and after neural stimulation or acetylcholine inje ction (10(-7) mol) in 8 anesthetized dogs. Regional changes in atrial repolarization were estimated by epicardial isointegral maps generated from computed values of the area under each electrogram and plotted o n an atrial grid. The anatomical distribution of the sinus node artery was assessed by intra-arterial injection of microspheres. The effects of right and left vagal and right atrial fat pad stimulation extended contralaterally. Acetylcholine injected into the sinus node artery af fected the lower left atrium whereas no microspheres could be found in this region upon microscopic examination. Therefore, this effect was possibly related to cholinergic activation of neuronal cell bodies loc ated in the right atrial wall and projecting to the lower left atrium, supporting the hypothesis that local circuit neurons were involved in the activation of the intrinsic nervous system of the heart.