Autonomic modulation and antiarrhythmic therapy in a model of long QT syndrome type 3.

Fabritz L, Damke D, Emmerich M, Kaufmann SG, Theis K, Blana A, Fortmüller L, Laakmann S, Hermann S, Aleynichenko E, Steinfurt J, Volkery D, Riemann B, Kirchhefer U, Franz MR, Breithardt G, Carmeliet E, Schäfers M, Maier SK, Carmeliet P, Kirchhof P

Research article (journal)

Abstract

AIMS: Clinical observations in patients with long QT syndrome carrying sodium channel mutations (LQT3) suggest that bradycardia caused by parasympathetic stimulation may provoke torsades de pointes (TdP). Beta-adrenoceptor blockers appear less effective in LQT3 than in other forms of the disease. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied effects of autonomic modulation on arrhythmias in vivo and in vitro and quantified sympathetic innervation by autoradiography in heterozygous mice with a knock-in deletion (DeltaKPQ) in the Scn5a gene coding for the cardiac sodium channel and increased late sodium current (LQT3 mice). Cholinergic stimulation by carbachol provoked bigemini and TdP in freely roaming LQT3 mice. No arrhythmias were provoked by physical stress, mental stress, isoproterenol, or atropine. In isolated, beating hearts, carbachol did not prolong action potentials per se, but caused bradycardia and rate-dependent action potential prolongation. The muscarinic inhibitor AFDX116 prevented effects of carbachol on heart rate and arrhythmias. beta-Adrenoceptor stimulation suppressed arrhythmias, shortened rate-corrected action potential duration, increased rate, and minimized difference in late sodium current between genotypes. Beta-adrenoceptor density was reduced in LQT3 hearts. Acute beta-adrenoceptor blockade by esmolol, propranolol or chronic propranolol in vivo did not suppress arrhythmias. Chronic flecainide pre-treatment prevented arrhythmias (all P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Cholinergic stimulation provokes arrhythmias in this model of LQT3 by triggering bradycardia. beta-Adrenoceptor density is reduced, and beta-adrenoceptor blockade does not prevent arrhythmias. Sodium channel blockade and beta-adrenoceptor stimulation suppress arrhythmias by shortening repolarization and minimizing difference in late sodium current.

Details about the publication

JournalCardiovascular Research (Cardiovasc Res)
Volume87
Issue1
Page range60-72
StatusPublished
Release year2010
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1093/cvr/cvq029

Authors from the University of Münster

Aleynichenko, Elena
Institute of Computer Science
Department for Cardiovascular Medicine
Fabritz, Larissa
Institute of Computer Science
Department for Cardiovascular Medicine
Fortmüller, Lisa
Institute of Computer Science
Department for Cardiovascular Medicine
Hermann, Sven
Clinic for Nuclear Medicine
Kirchhof, Paulus
Department for Cardiovascular Medicine
Schäfers, Michael
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Schmitz, Wilhelm
Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Wiethoff genannt Riemann, Burkhard
Clinic for Nuclear Medicine