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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1997; 29:1035-1038
© 1997 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Antiarrhythmic effect of repeated coronary occlusion during balloon angioplasty

KE Airaksinen and HV Huikuri

Cardiovascular Laboratory, Department of Medicine, University of Oulu, Finland. kari.airaksinen@.oulu.fi

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of the present study was to assess whether brief, repeated coronary artery occlusions during balloon angioplasty protect against ischemia-induced ventricular ectopy. BACKGROUND: Most sudden cardiac deaths are caused by fatal ventricular arrhythmias precipitated by early myocardial ischemia of acute coronary occlusion. In animals, a preceding 3- to 5-min coronary occlusion protects against malignant ventricular arrhythmias during a subsequent prolonged coronary occlusion. Whether such an antiarrhythmic effect caused by ischemic preconditioning occurs in humans is not known. METHODS: To assess the effects of a preceding, brief vessel occlusion-reperfusion cycle on the occurrence of ventricular ectopy, continuous electrocardiographic, heart rate and blood pressure recordings were performed in 156 patients before and during two identical balloon occlusions of a coronary artery (mean 111 s) separated by a 5-min equilibration period. RESULTS: The occluded vessel was the left anterior descending coronary artery in 94 patients, the left circumflex branch in 29 patients and the right coronary artery in 33 patients. Balloon occlusion of a coronary artery caused ventricular ectopy in 24 patients. The incidence of ventricular ectopy was higher during the first occlusion than during the second occlusion (21 patients [13.5%] vs. 11 patients [7%], p = 0.02). In 13 patients, ventricular ectopy was observed only during the first occlusion; in 8 patients during both occlusions; and in 3 patients only during the second occlusion. Bigeminal or repetitive ectopic beats were observed in eight patients during the first coronary occlusion and in four patients during the second occlusion. Atrial premature beats occurred during the first occlusion in three patients, but in none of the patients during the second occlusion. The 24 patients with ventricular ectopy during coronary occlusion had milder stenosis than the rest of the patients (mean [+/- SD] 74 +/- 12% vs. 81 +/- 12%, p = 0.01). The 13 patients with ventricular ectopy only during the first occlusion did not, however, differ significantly with respect to any clinical or angiographic features from the rest of the patients with ventricular ectopy. There were no significant differences in the signs of myocardial ischemia or hemodynamic variables between the sequential occlusions. CONCLUSIONS: A preceding, short vessel occlusion-reperfusion cycle seems to increase the electrical stability of ischemic myocardium.


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