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Title: Response of heart rate to atropine and left ventricular function in Chagas' heart disease. Author: Davila DF, Donis JH, Navas M, Feunmayor AJ, Torres A, Gottberg C. Journal: Int J Cardiol; 1988 Nov; 21(2):143-56. PubMed ID: 3225067. Abstract: Chagasic patients may have a normal or abnormal response of heart rate to atropine. To determine if this response to atropine is related to the degree of left ventricular dysfunction, we studied 33 patients with a positive complement fixation test for Chagas' disease. Eleven subjects, with atypical chest pain and negative complement fixation test, were used as controls (sero-negative). Left ventricular wall motion and the left ventricular volumes were determined by ventricular cineangiography. Coronary arteriography was also performed. The sero-negative subjects had normal left ventricular wall motion and the left ventricular diastolic volume was 88 +/- 24 ml/m2. The response of heart rate to atropine was 50 +/- 8 (mean +/- SD) (range 40-65 beats/min). On the basis of the response to atropine, the chagasic patients were divided into groups with a normal response (greater than 40 beats/min) and those with an abnormal response (less than 40 beats/min). Sixty five per cent of those with a normal response had left ventricular apical aneurysms. The left ventricular end-diastolic volume was not significantly different from the sero-negative subjects (96 +/- 26 ml/m2). Six patients (30%) had a left ventricular diastolic volume between 110 and 140 ml/m2. Sixty two per cent of those chagasic subjects with an abnormal response had diffuse left ventricular hypokinesis, and the left ventricular end-diastolic volume was 192 +/- 49 ml/m2 (P less than 0.01). The response of heart rate and the left ventricular diastolic volume were inversely correlated in the chagasic patients (r = -0.88, P less than 0.01). Our results indicate that myocardial damage and the degree of left ventricular dilatation are more severe in chagasic patients with an abnormal response of their heart rate to atropine. Furthermore, the inverse correlation between these two variables is highly indicative of a relationship between the response of heart rate to atropine and the degree of left ventricular dysfunction.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]