Electrocardiographic evaluation of broilers following unilateral occlusion of an extrapulmonary primary bronchus.

This study was conducted to provide a comprehensive evaluation of both the amplitudes and durations of the Lead II electrocardiogram (ECG) in nonascitic and ascitic broilers. At 14 d of age, male and female broiler chicks were sham-operated (SHAM, n = 27), or pulmonary hypertension was initiated by occluding one extrapulmonary primary bronchus (BRONCHUS CLAMP, n = 57). Lead II ECG and BW were recorded on Days 28 (ECG1) and 42 (ECG2), necropsies were conducted on all birds dying after Day 28, and final necropsies were conducted on Day 49. Data collected at necropsy included the presence (ASCITIC) or absence (NONASCITIC) of ascites, sex, and ventricular weights for calculating the right:total ventricular weight ratio (RV:TV), which serves as a reliable index of pulmonary hypertension. In each bird, three consecutive ECG1 and ECG2 wave cycles were quantified for both amplitude and duration of the following wave segments: Rb-R, R-S, S-R', R'-R'b, and S-T. The S wave amplitude was calculated by subtracting R-S from Rb-R and heart rate (HR) was measured from the peak of one T wave to the peak of the next. In the majority of comparisons, ASCITIC and BRONCHUS CLAMP broilers had larger S, R'-R'b, and S-T amplitudes, longer R-S, R'-R'b, and S-T durations, and a slower HR than NONASCITIC and SHAM broilers, regardless of sex. The differences in ECG wave forms and durations between ASCITIC and NONASCITIC broilers were greater on Day 42 (ECG2) than on Day 28 (ECG1), but when both ECG were used to develop a regression equation to estimate RV:TV, the R2 was 0.79. The most important Lead II ECG parameters associated with the development of ascites were an increasingly negative S wave amplitude and greater amplitudes and durations for R'-R'b and S-T as well as a decrease in the HR.

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