Effects of 4-aminopyridine on rate-related depression of cardiac action potentials
- 1 August 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
- Vol. 251 (2) , H297-H306
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1986.251.2.h297
Abstract
Canine cardiac Purkinje fibers and atrial trabeculae and rat and cat papillary muscles superfused with a hyperkalemic, hypoxic, and acidotic Tyrode solution were depolarized to membrane potentials (-70 to -60 mV) at which action potential amplitude declined as the coupling intervals of pacing stimuli were prolonged from 500 to 4,500 ms. The rate-related decline of action potential amplitude appeared to be due to time-dependent recovery of the early outward current rather than to a decrease in inward calcium current, since it was prevented by 4-aminopyridine (1.0 mM), but not by isoproterenol (1.0 microM), caffeine (5.0 mM), or CsCl (5-20 mM) and it was accompanied by an exponential increase of developed tension. Experiments using Purkinje fibers mounted in a single sucrose gap chamber demonstrated that the rate-related decline of action potential amplitude was maximal at membrane potentials between -70 and -40 mV and was negligible at less negative or more negative membrane potentials. These results may pertain to the mechanism for deceleration-dependent bundle branch block.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: