Preserved Parasympathetic Cardiac Innervation after Atrioventricular Node Modification: Evidence from Circle Maps of Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia.

Autor: Zarse, Markus, Markus, Kai, Schiek, Michael, Schauerte, Patrick, Sinha, Anil, Drepper, Friedhelm, Halling, Horst, Hanrath, Peter, Stellbrink, Christoph
Zdroj: Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology; Oct2002, Vol. 7 Issue 2, p157-163, 7p
Abstrakt: Introduction: Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) and heart rate variability (HRV) are parameters of autonomic cardiac innervation. They decrease with age and after atrioventricular nodal modification (AVNM) suggesting vagal denervation in both situations. We hypothesized, however, that AVNM causes only a transient, functional decline in vagal activity, whereas aging causes permanent vagal denervation. A new method of analyzing RSA phase dynamics based on circle maps (CM) can potentially differentiate between both forms of reduced vagal activity. Methods: In 18 younger and 14 older healthy control subjects 24-hour Holter ECGs were recorded for HRV analysis. Repeated measurements of RSA were acquired during paced breathing (PB). In 16 consecutive patients undergoing AVNM the same measurements were applied before, 1 day and 3 months after the procedure. CM were calculated from consecutive RR intervals and the similarity between different CM quantified by the Kullback information gain (KIG). Results: HRV analysis revealed lower HF bands, LF bands and RSA amplitudes in older vs. younger control subjects. KIG revealed less similarity between younger and older control subjects than within the respective age groups. After AVNM a decrease in HF bands was noted in HRV analysis. Three months after AVNM, HF bands returned to pre-ablation values. CM obtained before and 1 day after AVNM displayed comparable similarity to CM acquired 1 day before and 3 months after ablation. Conclusions: In contrast to conventional HRV parameters, CM of RSA are not altered by ablation in the posteroseptal space but by aging. Thus, this new method appears to differentiate between transient autonomic modification and chronic denervation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index