
Atrial and Ventricular Electrical and Contractile Remodeling and Reverse Remodeling Owing to Short‐Term Pacing‐Induced Atrial Fibrillation in Horses
Author(s) -
De Clercq D.,
Van Loon G.,
Tavernier R.,
Duchateau L.,
Deprez Piet
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of veterinary internal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.356
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1939-1676
pISSN - 0891-6640
DOI - 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2008.0202.x
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , atrial fibrillation , sinus rhythm , ventricular remodeling , refractory period , electrophysiology , effective refractory period , heart failure
Background: In humans, atrial fibrillation (AF) induces electrical, contractile, and structural remodeling leading to AF stabilization. Little is known about AF‐induced atrial remodeling in horses. Hypothesis: Induced AF produces rapid atrial electrical and contractile remodeling in horses. Animals: Six horses, 5 animals completed the study. Methods: Each horse was instrumented with a pulse generator and pacemaker to maintain AF by burst pacing and to study atrial and ventricular electrophysiology (AF cycle length [AFCL], AF duration, and atrial/ventricular effective refractory period [AERP/VERP] at different pacing cycle lengths [PCL]). Left atrial and ventricular contractile remodeling were assessed echocardiographically by calculation of fractional changes in atrial and ventricular dimensions, respectively, during the cardiac cycle. Measurements were performed at baseline, a 7‐day AF period and a 2‐day recovery period. Results: Atrial electrical and contractile remodeling could be demonstrated after 4 and 12 hours of AF, respectively. A progressive shortening of the AERP (261 ± 39–171 ± 18 ms at a PCL of 1,000 ms, P < .0001), an attenuation of the AERP rate adaptation, a decrease in AFCL (239 ± 39–194 ± 7 ms, P < .0001), and a decrease in atrial FS (12 ± 3% to 0 ± 2%, P < .05) occurred. AF duration increased progressively and became persistent in 2 animals. VERP did not change significantly. Upon restoration of sinus rhythm, values returned to baseline within 48 hours. Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Atrial electrical and contractile remodeling appears rapidly. After 7 days of AF, reverse remodeling occurred within 2 days. These observations suggest that early conversion of AF might be beneficial for success rate and early return to training.