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Impulse Formation and Conduction of Excitation in the Atrioventricular Node
Author(s) -
WATANABE YOSHIO,
WATANABE MARI
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.193
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1540-8167
pISSN - 1045-3873
DOI - 10.1111/j.1540-8167.1994.tb01292.x
Subject(s) - medicine , atrioventricular node , impulse (physics) , cardiology , atrial fibrillation , nodal , thermal conduction , electrical conduction system of the heart , automaticity , reentry , sinus rhythm , rhythm , electrophysiology , electrocardiography , anatomy , physics , tachycardia , cognition , quantum mechanics , psychiatry , thermodynamics
AV Nodal Conduction. Meijler et al. have recently challenged the classical concept of AV nodal conduction (the conduction hypothesis) and suggest that the AV node might he controlling ventricular rhythmicity through its automaticity electrotonically modulated In atrial excitation (the modulated pacemaker hypothesis). This article critically evaluates the three major arguments of Meijler: (1) the absence of convincing evidence for conduction of excitation in the AV node; (2) the prevalence of disproportionately short AV intervals in larger animals; and (3) elimination of KR intervals shorter than the cycle length of ventricular pacing during atrial fibrillation, to judge which of these two hypotheses would more satisfactorily explain various experimental and clinical findings accumulated in the past. Previous observations including microelectrode mapping of the rabbit AV junction during regular sinus rhythm as well as second–degree AV block, clinical and experimental studies on concealed conduction, and studies on the ventricular response to atrial fibrillation appear to he compatible with the conduction hypothesis, whereas clearcut evidence for automatic impulse formation in the AV node has not been presented, except in a small number of hearts showing spontaneous AV junctional rhythms. In view of these observations and theoretical considerations based on comparative anatomy of the AV node–His–Purkinje system and on the latest experimental study on the equine AV node, the authors conclude that the conduction hypothesis appears to better explain all the available data, except perhaps in a few cases with second–degree intra–AV nodal block.