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  • Title: Negative inotropic effect of diazepam in isolated guinea pig heart.
    Author: Hara Y, Kobayashi H, Ooshiro S, Futamura K, Nishino T, Chugun A, Temma K, Kondo H.
    Journal: J Vet Med Sci; 2001 Feb; 63(2):135-43. PubMed ID: 11258448.
    Abstract:
    The inotropic effect of diazepam, a benzodiazepine derivative, and its mechanism of action were examined using guinea pig heart and single ventricular cell preparations. In Langendorff hearts and right ventricular free-wall preparations, diazepam (10 to 100 microM) produced a monophasic negative inotropic effect in a concentration dependent manner. Neither a central type (flumazenil 1 microM) nor a peripheral type (PK11195 10 microM) of benzodiazepine receptor antagonist antagonized the monophasic negative inotropic effects of diazepam. Diazepam (10 to 100 microM) shortened action potential duration of papillary muscle in a concentration dependent manner. In isolated single ventricular cells, diazepam (30 and 100 microM) inhibited the calcium current (I(Ca)) in a concentration dependent manner. Diazepam produced a significant decrease in I(Ca) elicited by first depolarizing pulses, however, the decrease of I(Ca) was not augmented during a train of depolarizing pulses. Thus, diazepam appears to produce a tonic block of cardiac calcium channels and the mode of inhibition is clearly different from the use-dependent block of verapamil. From these results, it was concluded that diazepam produces a monophasic negative inotropic effect that is independent of the benzodiazepine receptor, and is probably mediated through an inhibition of I(Ca) in guinea pig heart preparations.
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