Bethanidine increased Na+ and Ca2+ currents and caused a positive inotropic effect in heart cells |
| |
Authors: | G Bkaily M D Payet M Benabderrazik J F Renaud R Sauvé M B Bacaner N Sperelakis |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sherbrooke, Qué., Canada. |
| |
Abstract: | The effects of bethanidine sulphate, a pharmacological analog of the cardiac antibrillatory drug, bretylium tosylate, were studied on action potentials (APs) and K+, Na+, and Ca2+ currents of single cultured embryonic chick heart cells using the whole-cell current clamp and voltage clamp technique. Extracellular application of bethanidine (3 X 10(-4) M) increased the overshoot and the duration of the APs and greatly decreased the outward K+ current (IK) and potentiated the inward fast Na+ currents (INa) and the inward slow calcium current (ICa). However, intracellular introduction of bethanidine (10(-4) M) blocked INa. In isolated atria of rat, bethanidine increased the force of contraction in a dose-dependent manner. These findings suggest that when applied extracellularly, bethanidine exerts a potentiating effect on the myocardial fast Na+ current and slow Ca2+ current and an inhibitory effect of IK. The positive inotropic effect of bethanidine could be due, at least in part, to an increase of Ca2+ influx via the slow Ca2+ channel and the Na-Ca exchange. It is suggested that the decrease of IK by bethanidine may account for its antifibrillatory action. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|