66 research outputs found

    Electrophysiologic effects of a new anitarrhythmic agent, recainam, on isolated canine and rabbit myocardial fibers

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    AbstractRecainam (Wy 42,362) is a new antiarrhythmic agent undergoing clinical evaluation, but its electrophysiologic effects in cardiac muscle are poorly defined. With microelectrode techniques, its profile in isolated preparations of dog and rabbit hearts was determined using drug concentrations of 10 to 300 μM. Recainam induced a concentration and frequency-dependent decrease in the maximal rate of rise of ihe phase 0 of the action potential (Vmax), action potential amplitude and overshoot potential, with little or no change in the effective refractory period except in Purkinje fibers, in which it was markedly reduced. At a 300 μMconcentration, Vmaxwas reduced 51% (p < 0.001) in ventricular muscle and 44% (p < 0.001) in atrial muscle, with no change in action potential duration or effective refractory period. At the same drug concentration in Purkinje fibers, Vmaxwas decreased by 41% (p < 0.01), action potential duration at 90% repolarization by 36% (p < 0.01) and effective refractory period by 34% (p < 0.01). Recainam had no significant effect on the sinoatrial node, but it depressed phase 4 depolarization in isoproterenol-induced automaticity in Purkinje fibers. The drug had no effect on slow channel potentials induced by high concentrations of potassium and isoproterenol.The data indicate that the electrophysiologic profile of recainam in isolated cardiac muscle is consistent with the overall effects of class IC agents without having an effect on the slow calcium channel. Its major action is to depress Vmax, with little effect on refractoriness. As in the case of other class IC compounds, the differential effects of recainam on the action potential duration in ventricular muscle and Purkinje fibers may predispose to the drug's proarrhythmic actions by accentuating heterogeneity in refractoriness in the heart

    Open Channel Block of HERG K ϩ Channels by Vesnarinone

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    ABSTRACT Vesnarinone, a cardiotonic agent, blocks I Kr and, unlike other I Kr blockers, produces a frequency-dependent prolongation of action potential duration (APD). To elucidate the mechanisms, we studied the effects of vesnarinone on HERG, the cloned human I Kr channel, heterologously expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Vesnarinone caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of HERG currents with an IC 50 value of 17.7 Ϯ 2.5 M at 0 mV (n ϭ 6). When HERG was coexpressed with the ␤-subunit MiRP1, a similar potency for block was measured (IC 50 : 15.0 Ϯ 3.0 M at 0 mV, n ϭ 5). Tonic block of the HERG channel current was minimal (Ͻ5% at 30 M, n ϭ 5). The rate of onset of block and the steady-state value for block of current were not significantly different for test potentials ranging from Ϫ40 to ϩ40 mV [time constant () ϭ 372 Ϯ 76 ms at ϩ40 mV, n ϭ 4]. Recovery from block at Ϫ60, Ϫ90, and Ϫ120 mV was not significantly different ( ϭ 8.5 Ϯ 1.5 s at Ϫ90 mV, n ϭ 4). Vesnarinone produced similar effects on inactivation-removed mutant (G628C/S631C) HERG channels. The IC 50 value was 10.7 Ϯ 3.7 M at 0 mV (n ϭ 5), and the onset and recovery from block of current findings were similar to those of wild-type HERG. Amino acids important for the binding of vesnarinone were identified using alanine-scanning mutagenesis of residues believed to line the inner cavity of the HERG channel. Six important residues were identified, including G648, F656, and V659 located in the S6 domain and T623, S624, and V625 located at the base of the pore helix. These residues are similar but not identical to those determined previously for MK-499, an antiarrhythmic drug. In conclusion, vesnarinone preferentially blocks open HERG channels, with little effect on channels in the rested or inactivated state. These actions may contribute to the favorable frequency-dependent prolongation in APD

    Effects of Bepridil on Spiral Reentry

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    Bepridil is effective for conversion of atrial fibrillation to sinus rhythm and in the treatment of drug-refractory ventricular tachyarrhythmias. We investigated the effects of bepridil on electrophysiological properties and spiral-wave (SW) reentry in a 2-dimensional ventricular muscle layer of isolated rabbit hearts by optical mapping. Ventricular tachycardia (VT) induced in the presence of bepridil (1 μM) terminated earlier than in the control. Bepridil increased action potential duration (APD) by 5% – 8% under constant pacing and significantly increased the space constant. There was a linear relationship between the wavefront curvature (κ) and local conduction velocity: LCV = LCV0 − D·κ (D, diffusion coefficient; LCV0, LCV at κ = 0). Bepridil significantly increased D and LCV0. The regression lines with and without bepridil crossed at κ = 20 – 40 cm−1, resulting in a paradoxical decrease of LCV at κ > 40 cm−1. Dye transfer assay in cultured rat cardiomyocytes confirmed that bepridil increased intercellular coupling. SW reentry in the presence of bepridil was characterized by decremental conduction near the rotation center, prominent drift, and self-termination by collision with boundaries. These results indicate that bepridil causes an increase of intercellular coupling and a moderate APD prolongation, and this combination compromises wavefront propagation near the rotation center of SW reentry, leading to its drift and early termination

    IKs Block and Spiral-Wave Reentry

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    We tested a hypothesis that an enhancement of IKs may play a pivotal role in ventricular proarrhythmia under high sympathetic activity. A 2-dimensional ventricular muscle layer was prepared in rabbit hearts, and action potential signals were analyzed by optical mapping. During constant stimulation, isoproterenol (ISP, 0.1 μM) significantly shortened action potential duration (APD); chromanol 293B (30 μM), a selective IKs-blocker, reversed the APD shortening. VTs induced in the presence of ISP lasted longer than in the control, and this was reversed by 293B. E-4031 (0.1 μM), a selective IKr-blocker, did not cause such reversal. Spiral-wave (SW) reentry with ISP was characterized by more stable rotation around a shorter functional block line (FBL) than in the control. After application of 293B, SW reentry was destabilized, and rotation around a longer FBL with prominent drift reappeared. The APD abbreviation by ISP close to the rotation center was more pronounced than in the periphery, leading to an opposite APD gradient (center < periphery) compared with controls. This effect was also reversed by 293B. In conclusion, β-adrenergic stimulation stabilizes SW reentry most likely though an enhancement of IKs. Blockade of IKs may be a promising therapeutic modality in prevention of ventricular tachyarrhythmias under high sympathetic activity

    The renin–angiotensin system promotes arrhythmogenic substrates and lethal arrhythmias in mice with non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy

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    [Aims]The progression of pathological left ventricular remodelling leads to cardiac dysfunction and contributes to the occurrence of malignant arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. The underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear, however. Our aim was to examine the role of the renin–angiotensin system (RAS) in the mechanism underlying arrhythmogenic cardiac remodelling using a transgenic mouse expressing a cardiac-specific dominant-negative form of neuron-restrictive silencer factor (dnNRSF-Tg). This mouse model exhibits progressive cardiac dysfunction leading to lethal arrhythmias. [Methods and results]Subcutaneous administration of aliskiren, a direct renin inhibitor, significantly suppressed the progression of pathological cardiac remodelling and improved survival among dnNRSF-Tg mice while reducing arrhythmogenicity. Genetic deletion of the angiotensin type 1a receptor (AT1aR) similarly suppressed cardiac remodelling and sudden death. In optical mapping analyses, spontaneous ventricular tachycardia (VT) and fibrillation (VF) initiated by breakthrough-type excitations originating from focal activation sites and maintained by functional re-entry were observed in dnNRSF-Tg hearts. Under constant pacing, dnNRSF-Tg hearts exhibited markedly slowed conduction velocity, which likely contributes to the arrhythmogenic substrate. Aliskiren treatment increased conduction velocity and reduced the incidence of sustained VT. These effects were associated with suppression of cardiac fibrosis and restoration of connexin 43 expression in dnNRSF-Tg ventricles. [Conclusion]Renin inhibition or genetic deletion of AT1aR suppresses pathological cardiac remodelling that leads to the generation of substrates maintaining VT/VF and reduces the occurrence of sudden death in dnNRSF-Tg mice. These findings demonstrate the significant contribution of RAS activation to the progression of arrhythmogenic substrates

    Effects of Amiodarone on the Electrophysiological Characters of Rabbit Atrial Myocytes

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    Effects of Bepridil on I_<Kr> and I_<Ks> of Rabbit Ventricular Myocytes

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    Voltage-Dependent Effects of Bepridil on D540K HERG Channels

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