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Title: Electrophysiological changes induced by lysophosphatidylcholine, an ischaemic phospholipid catabolite, in rabbit atrial and ventricular cardiac cells. Author: Fazekas T, Németh M, Papp JG, Szekeres L. Journal: Acta Physiol Hung; 1992; 79(3):261-72. PubMed ID: 1340084. Abstract: The effects of palmitoyl-lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) were studied on the cellular electrical activity of rabbit heart preparations. LPC (100 mumol/l) caused a considerable enhancement of the automaticity of the SA nodal and Purkinje fibers and frequently induced irregular firing in both supraventricular (SA node, atrium, AV junction) and ventricular (Purkinje fibers, papillary muscle) myocardial regions. The 'automatotropic' and arrhythmogenic effects of LPC were accompanied by a lengthening of the atrioventricular conduction time. In ventricular muscle fibers LPC (100 mumol/l) decreased the resting potential (RP), the maximum rate of depolarization (Vmax) and the amplitude (APA) and duration (APD) of the action potential, and often evoked action potentials of 'slow response' type. In atrial muscle cells, 100 mumol/l LPC was capable of inducing hyperpolarization, with concomitant increases in RP, Vmax, APA and APD; higher concentrations (300 and 600 mumol/l) of LPC resulted in decreases in RP, Vmax, APA and APD, i.e. phenomena similar to those observed with 100 mumol/l LPC in the ventricular myocardium. The results seem to support the assumption that lysolipids accumulating in the ischaemic myocardium may play a pathogenetic role in the development of both supraventricular and ventricular dysrhythmias accompanying coronary artery occlusion.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]