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Effect of mental stress on dynamic electrophysiological properties of the endocardium and epicardium in humans.

Authors :
Finlay, Malcolm C.
Lambiase, Pier D.
Ben-Simon, Ron
Taggart, Peter
Source :
Heart Rhythm; Jan2016, Vol. 13 Issue 1, p175-182, 8p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Striking temporal associations exist between ventricular arrhythmia and acute mental stress, for example, during natural disasters, or defibrillator shocks associated with stressful events. We hypothesized that electrophysiological changes in response to mental stress may be exaggerated at short coupling intervals and hence relevant to arrhythmia initiation.<bold>Objective: </bold>The aim of this study was to determine the dynamic response in human electrophysiology during mental stress.<bold>Methods: </bold>Patients with normal hearts and supraventricular tachycardia underwent electrophysiological studies avoiding sedation. Conditions of relaxation and stress were induced with standardized psychometric protocols (mental arithmetic and anger recall) during decremental S1S2 right ventricular (RV) pacing. Unipolar electrograms were acquired simultaneously from the RV endocardium, left ventricular (LV) endocardium (LV endo), and epicardium (LV epi), and activation-recovery intervals (ARIs) computed.<bold>Results: </bold>Twelve patients ( 9 women; median age 34 years) were studied. During stress, effective refractory period (ERP) reduced from 228 ± 23 to 221 ± 21 ms (P < .001). ARIs reduced during mental stress (P < .001), with greater reductions in LV endocardium than in the epicardium or RV endocardium (LV endo -8 ms; LV epi -5 ms; RV endo -4 ms; P < .001). Mental stress depressed the entire electrical restitution curve, with minimal effect on slope. A substantial reduction in minimal ARIs on the restitution curve in LV endo occurred, commensurate with the reduction in ERP (LV endo ARI 195 ± 31 ms at rest to 182 ± 32 ms during mental stress; P < .001). Dispersion of repolarization increased sharply at coupling intervals approaching ERP during stress but not at rest.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Mental stress induces significant electrophysiological changes. The increase in dispersion of repolarization at short coupling intervals may be relevant to observed phenomena of arousal-associated arrhythmia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15475271
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Heart Rhythm
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
112022925
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrthm.2015.08.011