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      Amiodarone-induced block of sodium current in isolated cardiac cells.

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          Abstract

          Sodium current (INa) block by amiodarone (AMI) was investigated in isolated single Purkinje and ventricular myocardial cells using the single suction-pipette voltage-clamp technique. AMI produced marked resting block that was enhanced at low holding potentials, findings consistent with a shift in the steady-state INa availability curve to more negative potentials (-16 +/- 3 mV). Resting block was not associated with any change in the time course of INa decay during a depolarizing clamp step. AMI also produced use-dependent block in conjunction with increases in rate (0.5-5.0 Hz) and pulse duration (2-200 msec). These changes are consistent with a slowing of the recovery from inactivation of the sodium channel. Brief depolarizing pulses produced little use-dependent block, suggesting that the onset of drug-induced block is slow. Thus, AMI blocks INa and shifts the availability curve in isolated myocytes, both of which contribute to the net tonic block. The results suggest that both rested state and inactivated state sodium channel block are factors in AMI's antiarrhythmic efficacy.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther.
          The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics
          0022-3565
          0022-3565
          Oct 1987
          : 243
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Pharmacology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois.
          Article
          2444698
          100bb34e-374f-4737-a7eb-78ff409c0fad
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