Electrical defibrillation thresholds with transventricular simple-capacitor discharge under conditions of ischemia by acute coronary occlusion


Abstract:

The threshold for cardiac defibrillation is defined as that intensity of electrical stimulation that results in a 50% probability of success. Using transventricular simple-capacitor discharge, peak current defibrillatory thresholds were determined under conditions of relative normothermia with ligation of the left descending coronary artery. The average value over 151 successful shocks in 15 dogs was 81. 1 mA/g of heart (SD equals 29. 3). This value was compared by means of the unpaired Student's t-test with the average obtained in a control series, without occlusion, but keeping the same general procedure and experimental conditions (89. 5 mA/g, SD equals 32. 8, 346 defibrillations, 20 dogs). The difference (t equals 2. 82) was significant at a level P less than 1%. In many cases, there were spontaneous refibrillations after successful discharges, or cardiac arrests which called for mechanical pacing. The latter, in turn, easily led to a new fibrillation, especially when contractility was impaired. When the analysis of variance was applied (Snedecor f-test), were found that the threshold value was stable with respect to time (f equals 0. 35) during the average experimental period (124 min, SD equals 55).

Año de publicación:

1982

Keywords:

    Fuente:

    scopusscopus

    Tipo de documento:

    Article

    Estado:

    Acceso restringido

    Áreas de conocimiento:

      Áreas temáticas:

      • Farmacología y terapéutica
      • Enfermedades