Dissociation between regional myocardial dysfunction and ECG changes during ischemia in the conscious dog.

Abstract
The relations between regional ventricular function and regional and surface ECG were studied in 8 conscious dogs during complete and partial coronary obstructions. Wall thickness and local ECG were measured using an implanted sonomicrometer: 11 subcutaneous electrodes were implanted in a modified McFee vectorcardiographic array. Complete obstruction of the circumflex coronary artery (using a hydraulic occluder) produced regional hypokinesia after 15 s. and regional dyskinesia at 1 min. Significant ECG changes occurred first in the surface vectorcardiogram; ST segments changed at 30 s; mean epicardial and endocardial ECG ST segments increased after 1 min. During mild partial coronary stenosis that produced stable reductions of systolic wall thickening (%.DELTA.WT) of less than 25% of control, no ST-segment changes occurred in the surface vectorcardiogram during the 10 min study period, although ST segments increased significantly in the endocardial and epicardial ECG. With moderate coronary stenoses that produced immediate 25-48% reductions of %.DELTA.WT (average reduction 36 .+-. 4%), significant mean ST displacements occurred after 2 min in the endocardial ECG; after 3 min in the epicardial ECG; after 4 min in the surface vectorcardiogram. With coronary stenoses that produced more than 50% reduction of %.DELTA.WT (average reduction 69 .+-. 2%), mean endocardial ST-segment changes were noted after 2 min; changes in the mean epicardial ECG and the surface vectorcardiogram occurred after 3 min. During mild coronary stenosis, regional myocardial dysfunction can occur without surface ECG changes. During moderate coronary stenosis, it occurs before endocardial ST-segment changes and precedes surface ECG alterations by several minutes. The surface ECG was slightly more sensitive than the local ECG during complete coronary occlusion and less sensitive during partial coronary obstruction. Regional contractile abnormalities provide a more sensitive indicator of ischemia than ECG ST-segment changes.

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