Structure and function of specific regions in the canine atrioventricular node
- 1 July 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
- Vol. 243 (1) , H41-H50
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1982.243.1.h41
Abstract
Using arterial perfusion and beveled microelectrodes, the anatomic and functional regions of the isolated canine AV [atrioventricular] node were explored. The atria and AV junctional tissues of 20 young dogs were excised and selectively perfused with physiological solution through the nutrient arteries to the sinus node, AV node and His bundle. AV node action potentials had shapes similar to those of the rabbit AV node and were conducted slowly (56 .+-. 7 mm/s); slowest conduction (16 .+-. 14 mm/s) was observed in the distal AV node where diastolic depolarization was always recorded and where maximum upstroke velocity of the action potential was slowest. Subsequent anatomic studies of the same preparations showed that the proximal region of the canine AV node was predominantly composed of interwoven slender transitional cells and that the distal region contained bundles of transitional cells and small but conspicuous aggregations of P-cells. The proximal portion of the canine AV node appeared to be organized for triage of atrial input during sinus rhythm. EM examinations revealed numerous relatively long (> 1.0 .mu.m) gap junctions between proximal AV node cells. The large gap junctions may provide an anatomic basis for electrotonic interaction during summation and conduction of AV node inputs. The distal AV node is the site of slowest AV conduction and also where most forms of AV junctional rhythm originate.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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