Circulation, Vol 87, 1705-1714, Copyright © 1993 by American Heart Association
MD Gonzalez and M Vassalle
BACKGROUND. Digitalis intoxication causes tachycardia, pacemaker shifts,
and conduction disturbances in the sinoatrial (SA) node, but the mechanisms
underlying these changes have not been clarified. We studied the role
played by oscillatory potentials, electrical inhomogeneity, and calcium
overload in cardiac steroid intoxication of the SA node. METHODS AND
RESULTS. Guinea pig SA nodes (isolated from atrial tissue) were perfused in
vitro. Transmembrane potentials and force were recorded. Strophanthidin (1
mumol/L) induced minor changes, although it was perfused for more than 30
minutes. In contrast, ouabain (0.5 mumol/L) and digoxin (1 mumol/L)
intoxicated the SA node in 10-20 minutes. Ouabain and digoxin increased
spontaneous rate and slope of diastolic depolarization, shifted the plateau
to more negative values, and decreased the maximum diastolic potential.
These cardiac steroids increased and then decreased contractile force and
eventually caused the action potential and twitch to become irregular in
amplitude and rhythm. In the presence of acetylcholine (ACh, 0.01-1
mumol/L), cardiac steroids decreased the resting potential, caused
spontaneous activity, and increased force and, eventually, oscillatory
potentials (Vos) and aftercontractions as well as overdrive excitation. To
make the SA node electrically homogeneous (only slow responses), the SA
node was perfused with high extracellular potassium concentration (with and
without norepinephrine), tetrodotoxin (2.61 mumol/L), or lidocaine (50
mumol/L). Adding ouabain or digoxin to these solutions increased the rate
but far less than in Tyrode's solution. Recovery in Tyrode's solution
initially caused fast and irregular rhythms, which then subsided. Low
extracellular calcium concentration ([Ca]o) (0.54 mmol/L) decreased force;
adding ouabain markedly increased force and induced Vos. High [Ca]o (8.1
mmol/L) increased force; adding ouabain decreased force and made action
potentials as well as contractions quite irregular. CONCLUSIONS. Ouabain
and digoxin quickly intoxicate the SA node by inducing calcium overload and
its manifestations (Vos, decrease in contractile force and
aftercontractions), whereas strophanthidin does not, possibly because of
the lack of a sugar moiety. The intoxication is less pronounced when sodium
influx is decreased (slow responses), and this accounts for the shifts from
dominant to subsidiary pacemakers. Marked conduction disturbances result
from calcium overload, leading to the fractionation of SA node activity.
ARTICLES
Role of oscillatory potential and pacemaker shifts in digitalis intoxication of the sinoatrial node
Department of Physiology, State University of New York, Health Science Center, Brooklyn 11203.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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