publications by Salim F. Idriss.
Papers Published
- SF Idriss, JA Bell, Cardiac repolarization instability during normal postnatal development.,
Journal of electrocardiology, vol. 41 no. 6
(September, 2008),
pp. 474-9 [doi] .
(last updated on 2013/05/16)Abstract:
Long QT syndrome is a disease characterized by abnormal lengthening of the QT interval and by sudden cardiac death. It is a disease of development, with the incidence of a sudden event increasing during childhood. Repolarization instability during postnatal development could make the substrate susceptible to a fatal arrhythmia. Dynamic changes in repolarization that occur on a beat-to-beat basis, known as alternans, are a hallmark of electrical instability. T-wave alternans (TWA) in the electrocardiogram correlates with arrhythmia risk and long-term survival in adults. We determined TWA properties longitudinally in vivo in 7 propofol-sedated New Zealand white rabbits using transesophageal pacing weekly from 2 to 10 weeks of age. Furthermore, TWA induction after the onset of rapid pacing was characterized in vitro in 6 infant (2 weeks) and 6 adolescent (7 weeks) isolated, arterially perfused rabbit hearts. In vivo, TWA amplitude was maximum at 2 weeks and declined with age. Isoproterenol increased TWA at 8 weeks (adolescence). In vitro, large-amplitude TWA was induced with rapid pacing in both infant and adolescents but decreased to low, steady-state levels in infants. We conclude that TWA properties are age dependent in rabbit. Significant TWA is induced in rabbit at the onset of rapid pacing.Keywords:
Aging* • Animals • Arrhythmias, Cardiac • Heart Conduction System • Rabbits • diagnosis* • physiopathology*