Literature DB >> 9776725

Slow conduction in cardiac tissue, I: effects of a reduction of excitability versus a reduction of electrical coupling on microconduction.

S Rohr1, J P Kucera, A G Kléber.   

Abstract

It was the aim of this study to characterize the spread of activation at the cellular level in cardiac tissue during conduction slowing, a key element of reentrant arrhythmias; therefore, activation patterns were assessed at high spatiotemporal resolution in narrow (70 to 80 microm) and wide (230 to 270 microm) linear strands of cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes, using multiple site optical recording of transmembrane voltage. Slow conduction was induced by graded elevation of [K+]o, by applying tetrodotoxin, or by exposing the preparations to the gap junctional uncouplers palmitoleic acid or 1-octanol. The main findings of the study are 4-fold: (1) gap junctional uncoupling reduced conduction velocity (range, 37 to 47 cm/s under control conditions) to a substantially larger extent before block (</=1 cm/s; ultra-slow conduction) than did a reduction of excitability (range, approximately 10 to 15 cm/s); (2) activation wavefronts during uncoupling meandered within the boundaries of the preparations, resulting in a pronounced additional slowing of conduction in wide cell strands; (3) at the cellular level, propagation during uncoupling-induced ultra-slow conduction was sustained by sequentially activated tissue patches, each of which consisted of a few cells being activated simultaneously; and (4) depending on the uncoupler used, maximal action potential upstroke velocities during ultra-slow conduction were either slightly (palmitoleic acid) or highly (1-octanol) depressed. Thus, depolarizing inward currents, the spatial pattern and degree of gap junctional coupling, and geometrical factors all contribute in a concerted manner to conduction slowing, which, at its extreme (0.25 cm/s measured over 1 mm), can reach values low enough to permit, theoretically, reentrant excitation to occur in minuscule areas of cardiac tissue (<<1 mm2).

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9776725     DOI: 10.1161/01.res.83.8.781

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ Res        ISSN: 0009-7330            Impact factor:   17.367


  76 in total

1.  Influence of dynamic gap junction resistance on impulse propagation in ventricular myocardium: a computer simulation study.

Authors:  A P Henriquez; R Vogel; B J Muller-Borer; C S Henriquez; R Weingart; W E Cascio
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 4.033

2.  Localization of sodium channels in intercalated disks modulates cardiac conduction.

Authors:  Jan P Kucera; Stephan Rohr; Yoram Rudy
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2002-12-13       Impact factor: 17.367

Review 3.  Defective cardiac ion channels: from mutations to clinical syndromes.

Authors:  Colleen E Clancy; Robert S Kass
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  Cardiac muscle is not a uniform syncytium.

Authors:  Robin Mark Shaw; Yoram Rudy
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2010-06-16       Impact factor: 4.033

5.  Atrial conduction slows immediately before the onset of human atrial fibrillation: a bi-atrial contact mapping study of transitions to atrial fibrillation.

Authors:  Gautam G Lalani; Amir Schricker; Michael Gibson; Armand Rostamian; David E Krummen; Sanjiv M Narayan
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2012-02-07       Impact factor: 24.094

6.  Optical recording of calcium currents during impulse conduction in cardiac tissue.

Authors:  Florian Jousset; Stephan Rohr
Journal:  Neurophotonics       Date:  2015-02-13       Impact factor: 3.593

7.  Mechanisms of intrinsic beating variability in cardiac cell cultures and model pacemaker networks.

Authors:  Julien G C Ponard; Aleksandar A Kondratyev; Jan P Kucera
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2007-02-26       Impact factor: 4.033

8.  Electrotonic loading of anisotropic cardiac monolayers by unexcitable cells depends on connexin type and expression level.

Authors:  Luke C McSpadden; Robert D Kirkton; Nenad Bursac
Journal:  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol       Date:  2009-06-03       Impact factor: 4.249

9.  Impulse propagation in synthetic strands of neonatal cardiac myocytes with genetically reduced levels of connexin43.

Authors:  Stuart P Thomas; Jan P Kucera; Lilly Bircher-Lehmann; Yoram Rudy; Jeffrey E Saffitz; André G Kléber
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2003-05-01       Impact factor: 17.367

Review 10.  The perinexus: sign-post on the path to a new model of cardiac conduction?

Authors:  J Matthew Rhett; Rengasayee Veeraraghavan; Steven Poelzing; Robert G Gourdie
Journal:  Trends Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2013-03-11       Impact factor: 6.677

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