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Circulation, Vol 85, 2227-2235, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
S Kimura, AL Bassett, H Xi and RJ Myerburg
BACKGROUND. Cocaine may produce life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias, but
it is not clear whether this is an indirect effect of coronary
vasoconstriction and ischemia or a direct myocardial effect of the
substance. Except for its effects on the Na+ current as a local anesthetic,
little is known about the direct electrophysiological actions on cardiac
cells. Therefore, we studied the effects of cocaine on action potentials
and membrane currents in isolated feline ventricular myocytes to test the
hypothesis that cocaine-induced arrhythmogenesis may be based on cellular
and ionic mechanisms. METHODS AND RESULTS. Action potentials and membrane
currents were recorded using the patch clamp technique. Single cells were
isolated from feline left ventricles by enzymatic digestion. Exposure to
cocaine (10 or 50 microM) depressed the plateau phase of the action
potential and prolonged action potential duration. Action potential
duration measured at 90% repolarization (APD90) was increased from 280 +/-
12 msec to 325 +/- 17 msec (p less than 0.01) by 5-minute exposure to 10
mumol cocaine, when the cells were stimulated at 1 Hz. During exposure to
50 mumol cocaine, APD90 was markedly increased from 298 +/- 13 msec to 437
+/- 35 msec (p less than 0.01) in seven of 16 cells, and early
afterdepolarizations (EADs) developed in these cells. The take-off
potential and the amplitude of EADs were -28.3 +/- 2.3 mV and 16.8 +/- 1.2
mV, respectively. Triggered activity arising from EADs was induced in four
of the seven cells. Addition of 1 nmol isoproterenol augmented EADs and
induced sustained triggered activity, whereas they were suppressed by
exposure to 2 microM verapamil. Whole-cell voltage clamp experiments
revealed that cocaine (50 microM) reduced the peak L-type Ca2+ current from
1.03 +/- 0.13 nA to 0.79 +/- 0.11 nA (23% reduction, p less than 0.05).
Cocaine also reduced the peak delayed rectifier K+ current from 362 +/- 51
pA to 113 +/- 32 pA (69% reduction, p less than 0.01). However, cocaine did
not affect activation and inactivation kinetics of these channels. Cocaine
had no effect on the inward rectifier K+ current. CONCLUSIONS. We conclude
that cocaine can prolong action potential duration and induce EADs and
triggered activity by blocking the delayed rectifier K+ current, and that
cocaine-induced abnormalities of repolarization, modulated by its
inhibitory effects on catecholamine reuptake, may play a role in the
potential of cocaine for induction of acute fatal arrhythmias.
ARTICLES
Early afterdepolarizations and triggered activity induced by cocaine. A possible mechanism of cocaine arrhythmogenesis
Department of Medicine (Division of Cardiology), University of Miami School of Medicine, FL 33101.
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