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Circulation, Vol 83, 622-634, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
TA Johnson, CL Engle, LM Boyd, GG Koch, M Gwinn and LS Gettes
Prior studies have demonstrated the presence of inhomogeneities in
myocardial [K+]e after serial 10-minute occlusions of the left anterior
descending coronary artery in the pig, even within restricted locations of
an ischemic zone. These inhomogeneities are thought to underlie the
electrophysiological abnormalities responsible for lethal ventricular
arrhythmias through reentrant and nonreentrant pathways, but a clear
association has not been demonstrated. As a prerequisite to establishing
this association, these studies were performed to establish measurement
standards for [K+]e inhomogeneity, to quantify the magnitude and time
course of these inhomogeneities, to determine whether the inhomogeneities
are greater in the ischemic border where lethal ventricular arrhythmias are
known to originate, and to assess the effect of a known antifibrillatory
drug on [K+]e inhomogeneities. [K+]e (expressed as the change in potassium
equilibrium potential, dEK [mV]) was measured in 15 preparations using an
average of 17 closely spaced, critically calibrated K(+)-sensitive
electrodes having stable response characteristics. A series of four
10-minute occlusions each separated by a 50-minute reperfusion period were
performed in each study. In half of the studies, intravenous verapamil (0.2
mg/kg bolus followed by 0.0065 mg/kg/hr) was administered before the fourth
occlusion. In nine studies (five control and four verapamil), electrodes
were placed in the marginal ischemic zone (from 2 mm outside to 5 mm inside
the visible cyanotic border). In six other studies (three control and three
verapamil), electrodes were placed in the central ischemic zone (10-20 mm
within the ischemic region). We determined that the standard deviation is
the best measure of inhomogeneity and that 12 equivalent measurement sites
are required to estimate it with a satisfactory degree of statistical
confidence. We found that after 10 minutes of ischemia, mean dEK was 1.6
times greater in the central than in the marginal ischemic zone, whereas
mean standard deviation at the same time was 1.5 times greater in the
marginal than in the central ischemic zone. Verapamil reduced mean dEK and
mean standard deviation in both ischemic zones for most of the occlusion by
delaying the rise in [K+]e and the inhomogeneity of that rise by 3-5
minutes. Comparisons of mean dEK with mean standard deviation revealed a
steep linear relation in the marginal zone and a curvilinear relation in
the central zone where higher mean dEK values were not accompanied by
higher values for mean standard deviation. Furthermore, we determined that
these relations were not altered by verapamil.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400
WORDS)
ARTICLES
Magnitude and time course of extracellular potassium inhomogeneities during acute ischemia in pigs. Effect of verapamil
Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599- 7075.
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