Circulation, Vol 86, 572-580, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
M Kambayashi, T Miura, BH Oh, HA Rockman, K Murata and J Ross Jr
BACKGROUND. The influence of changes in heart rate on myocardial
contractility (the force-frequency effect) differs under various
experimental conditions, including the anesthetized versus the conscious
state. METHODS AND RESULTS. To assess the influence of beta- adrenergic
stimulation on force-frequency effects on myocardial contraction and
relaxation, seven instrumented conscious dogs were studied in which heart
rate could be controlled by atrial pacing after the intrinsic rate was
slowed with a bradycardiac agent (UL-FS 49 0.5- 0.75 mg/kg). Left
ventricular (LV) pressure was measured with a micromanometer under resting
conditions and during dobutamine infusion at low, intermediate, and high
doses (2.7, 5.4, and 10.7 micrograms/kg/min). At each dose, heart rate was
progressively increased from 100 to 210 beats per minute. In the absence of
dobutamine (control), no significant positive force-frequency effect was
detected on LV dP/dtmax; this was probably due to the known effect of the
observed decrease in preload to reduce LV dP/dtmax, thereby offsetting an
effect of the force-frequency response to increased dP/dt. However, during
dobutamine infusions, the force-frequency effect was observed to increase
significantly in a dose-dependent manner with increases in heart rate. An
increase in heart rate from 100 to 210 beats per minute increased LV
dP/dtmax by 12.4 +/- 12.5% with low-dose, 22.7 +/- 13.1% with
intermediate-dose, and 27.5 +/- 8.9% with high-dose dobutamine. Changes in
preload and aortic pressure were within the same ranges under control
conditions and at each of the three dobutamine doses. The time constant of
LV pressure fall (tau) was significantly shorter with increases in heart
rate during control, but only the highest dobutamine dose caused further
significant shortening in tau with increased heart rate. CONCLUSIONS. These
data indicate that there is a pronounced dose-dependent action of
beta-adrenergic stimulation to enhance force-frequency-induced contractile
responses in normal conscious dogs.
ARTICLES
Enhancement of the force-frequency effect on myocardial contractility by adrenergic stimulation in conscious dogs
Kyoto University Hospital, Japan.
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