Literature DB >> 25696129

Ischaemia-induced cellular electrical uncoupling and ventricular fibrillation.

J R de Groot.   

Abstract

Sudden death resulting from ventricular fibrillation (VF) during acute myocardial ischaemia forms an important contribution to mortality associated with infarction. Its temporal distribution is not known, but 30% of mortality occurs within the first 60 minutes. Two distinct phases of arrhythmias have been demonstrated in laboratory animals subjected to coronary occlusion. The mechanism of the second, 1B phase (which is associated with more lethal events than the first, 1A phase) is largely unknown but appears to be related to cellular uncoupling, i.e. the closure of gap junctions. Gap junctions are intercellular communication channels that are permeable for ions and metabolites and are necessary for normal propagation of electrical activation. It has been suggested that closure of gap junctions results in a largely inhomogeneous substrate in which microreentry forms the electrophysiological mechanism for VF. However, there is growing support for the hypothesis that arrhythmias relate to the persistence of residual coupling rather than to the occurrence of uncoupling. With this, the ischaemic midmyocardium can depress the intrinsically viable tissue of the ischaemic subepicardium and subendocardium and cause conduction slowing and block leading to arrhythmias. Progression of uncoupling terminates this interaction and allows the subepicardium and subendocardium to recover. Indeed, electrophysiological properties recover subepicardially whereas the midmyocardial tissue becomes inexcitable. In addition, activation patterns during VF become restricted to the two-dimensional plane of the subepicardium. These observations support the hypothesis of residual coupling as an arrhythmogenic mechanism during the delayed phase of acute ischaemia. Whether this mechanism is equally important in patients with remodelled and failing hearts can at this time only be speculated upon. However, modifying intercellular coupling might turn out a new antiarrhythmic therapy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ischaemia-induced; ventricular fibrillation

Year:  2002        PMID: 25696129      PMCID: PMC2499767     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neth Heart J        ISSN: 1568-5888            Impact factor:   2.380


  33 in total

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