The chronaxie for myocardium and motor nerve in the dog with chest-surface electrodes.
The chronaxie (i.e., the duration for a stimulating current having twice the rheobasic, or minimum, value) was determined for ventricular myocardium in 12 pentobarbital-anesthetized dogs. Current was applied transthoracically via chest-surface electrodes located at the optimal axillary site for producing inspiration by stimulation of the phrenic nerve (electroventilation). In four dogs the chronaxie for motor-nerve was determined using electrodes at the same location. After using hand-held electrodes to identify the optimal stimulation site for electroventilation, 4.1 cm diameter electrodes were applied bilaterally to the optimal site on the thorax. In 12 dogs, the threshold current for producing ventricular ectopic beats was determined for single rectangular current pulses ranging from 0.1-10 ms in duration. From these data, strength-duration curves were determined and the average chronaxie for ventricular myocardium was found to be 1.82 ms. In four dogs the relationship between inspired volume and maximum stimulus intensity was determined using a 0.8 s burst of stimuli (60/s) with pulse durations ranging from 20-500 microseconds. From these data, strength-duration curves for current were constructed and the average chronaxie for motor-nerve was found to be 0.17 ms. The results of this study show that, because of the differing chronaxies, the current required to produce inspiration with short-duration stimuli is much less than that required to evoke an ectopic heart beat.[1]References
- The chronaxie for myocardium and motor nerve in the dog with chest-surface electrodes. Voorhees, C.R., Voorhees, W.D., Geddes, L.A., Bourland, J.D., Hinds, M. IEEE transactions on bio-medical engineering. (1992) [Pubmed]
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