| Literature DB >> 11509449 |
J M Anumonwo1, Y N Tallini, F J Vetter, J Jalife.
Abstract
Studies have characterized conduction velocity in the right and left bundle branches (RBB, LBB) of normal and genetically engineered mice. However, no information is available on the action potential characteristics of the specialized conduction system (SCS). We have used microelectrode techniques to characterize action potential properties of the murine SCS, as well as epicardial and endocardial muscle preparations for comparison. In the RBB, action potential duration at 50%, 70%, and 90% repolarization (APD(50,70,90)) was 6+/-0.7, 35+/-6, and 90+/-7 ms, respectively. Maximum upstroke velocity (dV/dt(max)) was 153+/-14 V/s, and conduction velocity averaged 0.85+/-0.2 m/s. APD(90) was longer in the Purkinje network of fibers (web) than in the RBB (P<0.01). Web APD(50) was longer in the left than in the right ventricle (P<0.05). Yet, web APD(90) was longer in the right than in the left ventricle (P<0.001). APD(50,70) was significantly longer in the endocardial than in the epicardial (P<0.001; P<0.003). APD(90) in the epicardial and endocardial was shorter than in the RBB ( approximately 36 ms versus approximately 100 ms). Spontaneous electrical oscillations in phase 2 of the SCS occasionally resulted in early afterdepolarizations. These results demonstrate that APDs in the murine SCS are significantly ( approximately 2-fold) longer than in the myocardium and implicate the role of the murine SCS in arrhythmias. The differences should have important implications in the use of the mouse heart to study excitation, propagation, and arrhythmias.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11509449 DOI: 10.1161/hh1601.095894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circ Res ISSN: 0009-7330 Impact factor: 17.367