Ishikawa T, Sugano T, Sumita S, Kimura K, Kikuchi M, Kosuge M, Kobayashi I, Shigemasa T, Endo T, Usui T, Umemura S
Second Department of Internal Medicine, Yokohama City University Urafune Hospital, Yokohama, Japan.
Europace. 1999 Jul;1(3):192-6. doi: 10.1053/eupc.1999.0038.
QT interval may change when cardiac function is improved by optimizing the atrioventricular the (AV) delay. The relationship between AV delay, QT interval and cardiac function in patients with implanted DDD pacemakers was studied in 12 patients (aged 71+/-12 SD years) with complete or high degree AV block. Cardiac output (CO) was measured using a Swan-Ganz catheter or by continuous Doppler echocardiography. The pacing rate was fixed at 70-80/min to eliminate the influence of heart rate. The AV delay was prolonged stepwise by 30 ms starting from 90 ms. All measurements were performed after 5 min of pacing. When the AV delay was prolonged, the CO and QT interval gradually increased and reached a peak, and then decreased. When the CO was increased from the minimum to the maximum value by optimizing the AV delay, the QT interval was significantly prolonged from 440+/-40 to 456+/-39 ms (P<0.002). The CO increased from 5.5+/-2.5 to 6.0+/-2.5 l x min(-1) (P<0.002) when the AV delay was changed, during which the QT interval was prolonged from the minimum to the maximum value. There was a significant positive correlation between the optimal AV delay at which CO was maximal (161+/-33 ms) and the optimal AV delay predicted from the maximum QT interval (167+/-29 ms, r=0.85, P<0.001). In conclusion, the optimal AV delay can be predicted from the QT interval.