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      Effects of Changing Heart Rate in Man by Electrical Stimulation of the Right Atrium : Studies at Rest, during Exercise, and with Isoproterenol

      1 , 1 , 1
      Circulation
      Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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          Abstract

          A technic is described for controlling the heart rate in patients with normal atrioventricular conduction by means of an electrical pacemaker catheter that stimulated the right atrium. When the heart rates of 17 patients in the resting state were elevated from an average of 80 to 121 beats/min., the cardiac indices remained virtually unchanged and averaged 3.67 and 3.72 L./min./M. 2 , respectively. Further increases in the heart rates resulted in small reductions in the cardiac indices to an average value of 3.21 L./min./M. 2 at 148 beats/min. The stroke volumes, ejection periods, and mean rates of ejection decreased as heart rate was increased.

          The role of heart rate in the circulatory response to exercise was examined in seven patients. When the heart rates were controlled by electrical stimulation at rates comparable to those previously achieved spontaneously during exercise, it was observed that cardiac output rose normally with exercise and that this rise was accomplished entirely through an increase in the stroke volume. In five patients the effects of isoproterenol infusion were also studied before and during control of the heart rate at the level reached spontaneously during isoproterenol administration. Again, when the heart rate was not permitted to rise, the increases in cardiac output with isoproterenol were mediated through increases in the stroke volume. These studies indicate that in the absence of augmented metabolic requirements, homeostatic mechanisms maintain cardiac output relatively constant despite large induced changes in the heart rate. However, when metabolic demands are increased by muscular exercise, or the circulation is stimulated by catecholamines, cardiac output can rise through an increase in stroke volume, even when alterations in the heart rate are prevented.

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          Most cited references39

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          Force-velocity relations in mammalian heart muscle.

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            Relationships between left ventricular ejection time, stroke volume, and heart rate in normal individuals and patients with cardiovascular disease.

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              A STUDY OF INOTROPIC MECHANISMS IN THE PAPILLARY MUSCLE PREPARATION

              The length-tension diagram, the force-velocity relation, the characteristics of the series elasticity, and the duration of the active state have been studied on the papillary muscle preparation of the cat heart, and on other examples of cardiac muscle. Positive inotropic changes such as the staircase phenomenon and post-extrasystolic potentiation occur without lengthening, but frequently with shortening, of the duration of the active state. They are accompanied by an increased velocity of contraction, and may be caused either by an intensification of the active state or by an alteration of the force-velocity characteristics of the contractile component. The changes in the force-velocity relation point to an adaptation of the velocity-efficiency relation in dependence on the frequency of contraction.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Circulation
                Circulation
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0009-7322
                1524-4539
                October 1965
                October 1965
                : 32
                : 4
                : 549-558
                Affiliations
                [1 ]From the Cardiology Branch, National Heart Institute, Bethesda, Maryland.
                Article
                10.1161/01.CIR.32.4.549
                5825546
                ef9f1c1e-e72e-4303-86d6-b27fd5e4ca1c
                © 1965
                History

                Biochemistry,Animal science & Zoology
                Biochemistry, Animal science & Zoology

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