PMID: 8956121Nov 1, 1996Paper

Detection of acute cardiac allograft rejection with high resolution electrocardiography: experimental study in rats

The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation : the Official Publication of the International Society for Heart Transplantation
D BabutyD Garnier

Abstract

To diagnose early acute cardiac rejection, we evaluated high-resolution electrocardiography in rats. Heterotopic heart transplantations were performed in allogeneic animals, either treated with cyclosporine or untreated, and in syngeneic animals. High-amplification electrocardiograms were recorded daily, under anesthesia, with two intra-abdominal leads. After amplification (x 5000 to 20,000), the electrocardiographic signal was acquired and analyzed with P-Clamp software. We measured the amplitude (millivolts) and duration (milliseconds) of the auriculogram (P wave) and the ventriculogram (QRS wave), the duration of auriculoventricular conduction (milliseconds; PQ interval) and the heart rate. Twenty-five grafted hearts were fully studied in recipients not treated with cyclosporine (allogeneic n = 16, syngeneic n = 9). In the allogeneic group, acute cardiac rejection was always accompanied by an early and progressive increase in P wave duration and PQ interval, whereas an increase in QRS duration was subsequently recorded. No significant change in P wave, PQ interval, or QRS wave duration was recorded in the syngeneic group, which showed no histologic rejection lesions. A decrease in P wave and QRS wave amplitude was recorded i...Continue Reading

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Cardiac Conduction System

The cardiac conduction system is a specialized tract of myocardial cells responsible for maintaining normal cardiac rhythm. Discover the latest research on the cardiac conduction system here.

Allogenic & Autologous Therapies

Allogenic therapies are generated in large batches from unrelated donor tissues such as bone marrow. In contrast, autologous therapies are manufactures as a single lot from the patient being treated. Here is the latest research on allogenic and autologous therapies.