Moderate but not severe hypothermia causes pro-arrhythmic changes in cardiac electrophysiology
Cardiovascular Research

Abstract
Treatment of arrhythmias evoked by hypothermia/rewarming remains challenging, and the underlying mechanisms are unclear. This
Detailed ECG, surface electrogram, and panoramic optical mapping were performed in isolated rabbit hearts cooled to moderate (31°C) and severe (17°C) hypothermia. Ventricular activation was unchanged at 31°C while action potential duration (APD) was significantly prolonged (176.9 ± 4.2 ms vs. 241.0 ± 2.9 ms,
Moderate hypothermia does not significantly change ventricular conduction time but prolongs repolarization and is pro-arrhythmic. Further cooling to severe hypothermia causes parallel changes in ventricular activation and repolarization, changes which are anti-arrhythmic. Therefore, relative changes in QRS and QT intervals (QR/QTc) emerge as an ECG-biomarker of pro-arrhythmic activity. Risk for ventricular fibrillation appears to be linked to the relatively low temperature sensitivity of ventricular transmural conduction, a conclusion supported by the anti-arrhythmic effect of heptanol at 31°C.
Contributors

Karen McGlynn
Author

Andrew Allan
Author

Adam Connolly
Author

Martin Bishop
Author

Francis Burton
Author

Sarah Kettlewell
Author

Rachel Myles
Author
University of Glasgow Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Torkjel Tveita
Author

Godfrey L Smith
Author
