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Tachycardia-Induced Changes in Na<sup>+</sup>Current in a Chronic Dog Model of Atrial Fibrillation

256

Citations

25

References

1997

Year

Abstract

We have previously shown that chronic rapid atrial activation (400 bpm) reduces atrial conduction velocity in dogs, contributing to the development of a substrate supporting sustained atrial fibrillation (AF). However, the cellular and ionic mechanisms underlying these functional changes have not been defined. We applied whole-cell patch-clamp techniques to atrial myocytes from dogs subjected to atrial pacing at 400 bpm for 7 days (P7, n = 6) and 42 days (P42, n = 5) and compared the results with those from sham-operated dogs similarly instrumented but without pacemaker activation (P0, n = 6). Rapid atrial pacing allowed for the induction of sustained AF in 67% and 100% of dogs paced for 7 and 42 days, respectively, and significantly decreased conduction velocity under P7 and P42 conditions. In dogs paced for 7 days, Na+ current (INa) density was reduced by 28% at -40 mV (P < .0001, n = 59 cells). INa changes were even more decreased under P42 conditions, by approximately 52% at -40 mV (P < .0001): from -78.7 +/- 4.6 pA/pF (P0, n = 28 cells) to -37.7 +/- 3.0 pA/pF (P42, n = 43 cells). INa was significantly reduced at all voltages ranging from -65 to -10 mV. Voltage-dependent activation and inactivation properties, activation kinetics, and recovery from inactivation were not altered by rapid atrial pacing; however, inactivation kinetics were slowed. AF duration was related to mean INa in each dog (r2 = .573, P < .001). We conclude that rapid atrial activation significantly reduces both conduction velocity and INa density. Since INa is a major determinant of conduction velocity, our data point to INa reduction as a potentially important mechanism contributing to the substrate for AF in this model.

References

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