Paroxysmal AV Block Intrinsic AV Block

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Intrinsic AV Block

Overview

Pathophysiology

  • Intrinsic AV block (I-AVB) is an AV block secondary to an innate anatomical defect.
  • It is hugely recognized on an ECG as an atrial premature beat (APB) or ventricular premature beat (VPB) before and after a variable period of complete AV block/asystole.
    • Sinus rate increase/ decrease prior to the VPB/APB or during the period of asystole further divides it into Tachycardia Dependent AV block (TD-AVB) and Pause/Bradycardia dependent AV block (PD- AVB).
  • Normal cardiac myocytes are associated with a more negative resting membrane potential, an increased amplitude of action potential and a fast depolarizing sodium current.
  • An exact opposite is seen in diseased myocytes responsible for TD- PAVB. An imbalance between inward depolarizing sodium and calcium currents and outward repolarizing potassium currents causes an increase in recovery time and leads to a phenomenon called ‘post-repolarization refractoriness’.
  • Despite repolarization being complete, a stimulus would not be able to induce an action potential.
  • A hypothetical line of thinking that could be attributed to both PD-AVB and TD-AVB is a ‘concealed conduction’ in the intra His Bundle which serves as a source of a delayed escape rhythm, thereby disrupting the refractoriness and recovery time of the surrounding myocytes. This predisposes the patient to fatal complications such as syncope, presyncope, sudden cardiac death and atrial fibrillation with a rapid ventricular repose rate.
  • Certain studies hypothesize that ventricular or supraventricular impulses reach this ‘concealed conduction’ at a time when there is a local phase 4 block (when sodium channels are inactive.) This subsequent long pause is reflected by the increased H-H interval in EPS studies and confirms an intra His Bundle block (an entity commonly missed and mislabeled as an infra-His Bundle block or AV- block on electrophysiological studies)
  • Much debate surrounds this as it has also been documented that TD- AV/ PD-AV blocks are not related to phase 3 or phase 4 conduction defects, as previously hypothesized. It is related to myocardial ischemia, Mobitz type II block, RBBB and Intra His bundle conduction defects, retrograde ventricular premature beats and anterograde atrial premature beats; all factors that are independent of local phase 4 blocks.


References