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Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York 10010
Submitted 30 January 2003 ; accepted in final form 12 May 2003
Programmed electrical stimulation (PES) is a crucial aspect of the
evaluation of the risk of arrhythmias in cardiac patients and provides a
powerful tool for understanding the mechanisms of arrhythmia in experimental
models. Whereas PES in the mouse is well characterized, the procedures
allowing for follow-up studies in the same animal have not been developed. In
this report, we describe a novel subdiaphragmatic approach that allows for
repeat electrophysiological studies in the mouse. Under inhaled anesthesia,
PES was performed in 36 wild-type mice via a stimulating electrode introduced
through an epigastric incision and placed directly into the diaphragmatic
surface of the heart. The procedure was repeated 7 days later. Ventricular
effective refractory periods (VERP) did not change significantly between the
initial and follow-up trials. Chronic treatment with amiodarone, however, was
associated with a 70% prolongation in VERP from initial to follow-up studies
(P
0.001). In addition, PES of a genetically modified strain
with sudden cardiac death, the connexin43 conditional knockout mouse
consistently induced lethal polymorphic ventricular tachycardia. Thus
sequential PES in mice is feasible with the use of a subdiaphragmatic
approach, yields reproducible VERP values, and can be used to follow
pharmacologically induced changes in VERP and identify mice at risk of lethal
ventricular arrhythmias.
artificial cardiac pacing; electrophysiology; heart; mice
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