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(Chest. 1973;63:666-677.)
© 1973 American College of Chest Physicians

The Mechanism of Intermittent Bundle Branch Block: Relationship to Prolonged Recovery, Hypopolarization and Spontaneous Diastolic Depolarization

Mauricio B. Rosenbaum M.D.1; Marcelo V. Elizari M.D.2; Julio O. Lazzari M.D.3; M. Susana Halpern M.D.4; Gerardo J. Nau M.D.4; and Raul J. Levi M.D.4

1 Chief, Service of Cardiology, Salaberry Hospital
2 Chief, Department of Electrocardiography, Argerich Hospital
3 Department of Electrocardiography, Argerich Hospital
4 Service of Cardiology, Salaberry Hospital

Fourteen cases of intermittent bundle branch block (BBB) are reported, in which block was shown to occur both at rapid and slow rates, with an intermediate normal conduction range. Tachycardia-dependent BBB was releted to prolonged recovery and was termed "phase-3 block;" bradycardia-dependent BBB was related to hypopolarization plus spontaneous diastolic depolarization (SDD), and was termed "phase-4 block." Two critical rates do exist; one, separating phase-3 block from normal conduction; the other, separating normal conductin from phase-4 block. The range of normal conduction seems to be inversely related to the amount of injury. It may be extremely narrow when recovery is greatly Prolonged, and/or when hypopolarization is severe, and/or when SDD is enhanced. This may simulate supernormality. In other patients, or in the same patient, the normal conduction range may widen up to several seconds, at the expense of both phase-3 and phase-4 block (accordion-like effect). Deeply inverted T waves correlated well with phse-3 and phase-4 block. Bayley's theory of conventional myocardial injury applies remarkably well to the analysis of injury of the intraventrucular conducting fascicles. The only difference is that SDD plays an important additional role in the conduction system.




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O Gautschi and B Naegeli
Cardiac memory mimicking myocardial ischaemia
J R Soc Med, March 1, 2003; 96(3): 131 - 132.
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