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Age-related increases in cardiac excitability, refractoriness and impulse conduction favor arrhythmogenesis in male rats.

Stefano RossiRosario StatelloGiovanna PelàFabio LeonardiAderville CabassiRuben ForestiGiacomo RozziFrancesco Paolo Lo MuzioLuca CarnevaliAndrea SgoifoLuca MagnaniSergio CallegariPaolo PastoriAlessandro TafuniDomenico CorradiMichele MiragoliEmilio Macchi
Published in: Pflugers Archiv : European journal of physiology (2023)
The effects of excitability, refractoriness, and impulse conduction have been independently related to enhanced arrhythmias in the aged myocardium in experimental and clinical studies. However, their combined arrhythmic effects in the elderly are not yet completely understood. Hence, the aim of the present work is to relate relevant cardiac electrophysiological parameters to enhanced arrhythmia vulnerability in the in vivo senescent heart. We used multiple-lead epicardial potential mapping in control (9-month-old) and aged (24-month-old) rat hearts. Cardiac excitability and refractoriness were evaluated at numerous epicardial test sites by means of the strength-duration curve and effective refractory period, respectively. During sinus rhythm, durations of electrogram intervals and waves were prolonged in the senescent heart, compared with control, demonstrating a latency in tissue activation and recovery. During ventricular pacing, cardiac excitability, effective refractory period, and dispersion of refractoriness increased in the aged animal. This scenario was accompanied by impairment of impulse propagation. Moreover, both spontaneous and induced arrhythmias were increased in senescent cardiac tissue. Histopathological evaluation of aged heart specimens revealed connective tissue deposition and perinuclear myocytolysis in the atria, while scattered microfoci of interstitial fibrosis were mostly present in the ventricular subendocardium. This work suggests that enhanced arrhythmogenesis in the elderly is a multifactorial process due to the joint increase in excitability and dispersion of refractoriness in association with enhanced conduction inhomogeneity. The knowledge of these electrophysiological changes will possibly contribute to improved prevention of the age-associated increase in cardiac arrhythmias.
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