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    The inotropic and lusitropic effects of ketamine in isolated human atrial myocardium: The effect of adrenoceptor blockade

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    We studied the direct myocardial effects of racemic ketamine, in the presence of \u3b1- and \u3b2-adrenoceptor blockade, on isolated human right atrial myocardium. Isometric force of contraction (FoC), its first derivative with time (+dF/dt), the contraction relaxation coupling parameter R2 = (+dF/dt) / (-dF/dt), and time to half relaxation (T1/2) were recorded before and after addition of 10-6, 10-5 and 10-4 M racemic ketamine alone and in the presence of \u3b1-adrenoceptor blockade (phentolamine 10-6 M) and \u3b2-adrenoceptor blockade (propranolol at 10-6 M). Ketamine had a moderate positive inotropic effect at 10-5 M (FoC, 104% \ub1 5% of baseline value; P = 0.03) and 10-4 M (FoC, 107% \ub1 11% of baseline value; P = 0.09). Racemic ketamine had a negative inotropic effect in the presence of propranolol (FoC, ketamine 10-6 M, 77% \ub1 11%; ketamine 10-5 M, 63% \ub1 16%; ketamine 10-4 M, 62% \ub1 17% of baseline; P < 0.001) but not phentolamine (FoC, ketamine at 10-6 M, 94% \ub1 6%; ketamine 10-5 M, 96% \ub1 5%; and ketamine 10-4 M, 98% \ub1 15% of baseline). Ketamine decreased T1/2 (ketamine 10-5 M, 94% \ub1 3% of baseline value; P < 0.001 and ketamine 10-4 M, 90% \ub1 9% of baseline value; P = 0.007) but did not modify R2. In human right atrial myocardium, racemic ketamine induced a moderate positive inotropic effect and hastened isometric relaxation. In the presence of \u3b2-adrenoceptor blockade it induced a direct negative inotropic effect
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