We previously showed that a premature stimulus can significantly alter vulnerability to arrhythmias by modulating spatial gradients of ventricular repolarization (ie, modulated dispersion). However, it is not clear if such changes in arrhythmia vulnerability can be attributed to the formation of an electrophysiological substrate for unidirectional block and what the potential role is of tissue structure in this process. Therefore, the main objective of the present study was to examine the concomitant effect repolarization gradients and tissue structure have on unidirectional block. Optical action potentials were recorded from 128 ventricular sites (1 cm(2)) in 8 Langendorff-perfused guinea pig hearts. Propagation was confined to the epicardial surface using an endocardial cryoablation procedure, and a 12-mm barrier with a 1.5-mm isthmus was etched with a laser onto the epicardium. A premature stimulus (S2) was delivered over a range of S1S2 coupling intervals to modulate repolarization gradients in a predictable fashion. When a second premature stimulus (S3) was delivered from the center of the isthmus, the occurrence and orientation of unidirectional block were highly dependent on repolarization gradients created by the S2 beat. In this model, a local repolarization gradient of 3.2 ms/mm was required for unidirectional block at this isthmus. In addition, the formation of unidirectional block was critically dependent on the presence of the source-sink mismatch imposed by the isthmus. These results may explain how the interplay between spatial heterogeneities of repolarization and tissue structure form a substrate for unidirectional block and reentry.