Changes in Q‐T and Q‐aT Intervals at Rest and During Exercise With Different Modes of Cardiac Pacing
- 1 November 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology
- Vol. 8 (6) , 825-831
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-8159.1985.tb05901.x
Abstract
The influence of heart rate variation on the Q-T and Q-aT intervals (measured from the onset of the QRS to the end or the apex, respectively, of the T-wave) was studied both at rest and during exercise using different modes of pacing. The studies were made on 21 patients with high-degree atrioventricular block. In seven patients with programmable ventricular inhibited (VVI) pacemakers, an increase in pacing rate during rest produced significant shortening of both Q-T and Q-aT. During observations made at rest and during exercise in 14 patients with fixed rate VVI, atrial rate matched asynchronous (VVIm) or atrial triggered (VAT) pacing. Significant shortening of Q-T and Q-aT intervals occurred during exercise in all pacing modes, but was greatest with VVIm and VAT. The Q-T and Q-aT changes were almost parallel in all situations. For measurements made by two independent observers the coefficient of variation was lower for Q-aT than for Q-T (2.2 versus 2.5) and the correlation coefficient was higher (0.96 versus 0.93), indicating easier identification of Q-aT than of Q-T. This study indicated that changes in Q-T and in Q-aT are influenced by intrinsic factors in addition to the ventricular rate. Atrioventricular synchronization did not seem to influence these changes.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- An exponential formula for heart rate dependence of QT interval during exercise and cardiac pacing in humans: Reevaluation of Bazett's formulaThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1984
- Contribution of heart rate to QT interval shortening during exerciseEuropean Heart Journal, 1983
- The Use of QT Interval to Determine Pacing Rate: Early Clinical ExperiencePacing and Clinical Electrophysiology, 1983
- The Ventricular Paced QT Interval—The Effects of Rate and ExercisePacing and Clinical Electrophysiology, 1982
- Relation between QT interval and heart rate. New design of physiologically adaptive cardiac pacemaker.Heart, 1981
- Effect of intravenous propranolol on QT interval. A new method of assessment.Heart, 1980
- Q-aTc interval as a clinical indicator of hypercalcemiaThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1979
- The electrocardiogram in hyperparathyroidism∗The American Journal of Cardiology, 1959