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(Circulation. 2002;105:880.)
© 2002 American Heart Association, Inc.
Basic Science Reports |
From Academic Medical Center (E.E.V., R.W., L.N.B.), Department of Physiology, Task Force Heart Failure and Aging, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands; and University Medical Center Utrecht (R.W.), Department of Medical Physiology, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Correspondence to Dr E. Etienne Verheijck, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Task Force Heart Failure and Aging, Department of Physiology, Meibergdreef 15, PO Box 22700, 1100 DE Amsterdam, The Netherlands. E-mail e.verheijck{at}amc.uva.nl
Background Proper pacemaking of the heart requires a specific organization of the sinoatrial (SA) node. The SA node drives the surrounding atrium but needs to be protected from its hyperpolarizing influence, which tends to suppress pacemaker activity. It has been suggested that the hyperpolarizing atrial influence is minimal at the site of the central nodal area.
Methods and Results Atrio-sinus interaction was assessed by specific depolarization of the SA node by blocking the HERG-encoded rapid delayed rectifier current (IK,r) with the drug E-4031. In the SA node, E-4031 (1 µmol/L) changed action potential configuration drastically but never resulted in pacemaker arrest. In the atrium, E-4031 did not affect the membrane resting potential, thereby leaving the normal hyperpolarizing load on the SA node intact. When the SA node was sectioned into strips and subsequently separated from the atrium, spontaneous electrical activity of the strip containing the primary pacemaker ceased on IK,r blockade. When not separated from the atrium, IK,r blockade never resulted in pacemaker arrest. A similar effective atrio-sinus interaction was demonstrated in computer simulations.
Conclusions Our results demonstrate that the atrium provides an effective hyperpolarizing load on the central SA nodal area and is at least one of the controlling mechanisms for normal pacemaking function. The present study can be of help in understanding why patients with long-QT2 syndrome secondary to a mutation in HERG do not show sinus arrest.
Key Words: sinoatrial node potassium computers
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