Changes in intraventricular phase delays, phase angle histograms, amplitude images, and electrocardiograms (ECG) were investigated during oesophageal pacing with and without beta-blockade, after induced myocardial infarction, and during septic shock in the anaesthetized baboon model. Unavoidable triggering from the pacemaker spike and to a lesser extent increased heart rate were responsible for parameter changes during pacing. Myocardial infarction changed contraction patterns, which did not always correlate with conduction changes from the ECG's. Cardiac volume changes during septic shock could be responsible for the abnormal trends in phase angle spread and electrocardiographic data.