Literature DB >> 18598965

Acute ischemia of canine interventricular septum produces asymmetric suppression of conduction.

Shiho T Morita1, Hiroshi Morita, Douglas P Zipes, Jiashin Wu.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Acute ischemia depresses tissue excitability more rapidly in the epicardium than in the endocardium of the canine left ventricular (LV) free wall. However, the effects of acute ischemia on conduction in the interventricular septum (IVS), which is composed of right ventricular (RV) and LV endocardium and midmyocardium without epicardium, are less known.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the hypothesis that the IVS exhibits transseptal differences in local tissue response to acute ischemia.
METHODS: Isolated canine IVS preparations were perfused through the septal branch of the anterior descending coronary artery, and conduction on the cut-exposed transseptal surfaces was optically mapped before and after two sequential episodes of 8 minutes of global ischemia (separated by >60 minutes of reperfusion). The preparations were paced alternately between the RV endocardium and LV endocardium at cycle lengths of 250, 300, and 1,500 ms.
RESULTS: Prior to ischemia, transseptal conduction was radial and symmetric during either RV endocardial or LV endocardial pacing at all cycle lengths. Eight minutes of ischemia depressed conduction velocity more in the RV half than in the LV half of the IVS and caused local conduction block in the sub-RV endocardium, especially during rapid pacing. The K(ATP) channel blocker glibenclamide (10 micromol/L) prevented development of this transseptal asymmetry and conduction block during ischemia.
CONCLUSION: Acute global ischemia increased transseptal heterogeneity and induced sub-RV endocardial block of conduction via activation of the ATP-sensitive potassium current. Such changes could contribute to initiation of arrhythmia in patients with septal infarction.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18598965     DOI: 10.1016/j.hrthm.2008.03.036

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart Rhythm        ISSN: 1547-5271            Impact factor:   6.343


  5 in total

Review 1.  KATP Channels in the Cardiovascular System.

Authors:  Monique N Foster; William A Coetzee
Journal:  Physiol Rev       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 37.312

2.  Left-to-right ventricular differences in I(KATP) underlie epicardial repolarization gradient during global ischemia.

Authors:  Sandeep V Pandit; Kuljeet Kaur; Sharon Zlochiver; Sami F Noujaim; Philip Furspan; Sergey Mironov; Junco Shibayama; Justus Anumonwo; José Jalife
Journal:  Heart Rhythm       Date:  2011-07-01       Impact factor: 6.343

3.  Transseptal dispersion of repolarization and its role in the development of Torsade de Pointes arrhythmias.

Authors:  Serge Sicouri; Aaron Glass; Marcela Ferreiro; Charles Antzelevitch
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol       Date:  2009-11-10

4.  ST-segment elevation of right precordial lead (V4 R) is associated with multivessel disease and increased in-hospital mortality in acute anterior myocardial infarction patients.

Authors:  Eyyup Tusun; Mahmut Uluganyan; Murat Ugur; Gurkan Karaca; Faizel Osman; Bayram Koroglu; Ahmet Murat; Ahmet Ekmekci; Hüseyin Uyarel; Osman Sahin; Mehmet Eren; Osman Bolca
Journal:  Ann Noninvasive Electrocardiol       Date:  2014-09-11       Impact factor: 1.468

5.  Ankyrin-G mediates targeting of both Na+ and KATP channels to the rat cardiac intercalated disc.

Authors:  Hua-Qian Yang; Marta Pérez-Hernández; Jose Sanchez-Alonso; Andriy Shevchuk; Julia Gorelik; Eli Rothenberg; Mario Delmar; William A Coetzee
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-01-14       Impact factor: 8.713

  5 in total

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