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Departments of 1 Physiology and 2 Medicine, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 5C1
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ABSTRACT |
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Presently, the only therapy for ventricular fibrillation is delivery of high-voltage shocks. Despite "successful defibrillation," patients may have poor cardiac contractility, the mechanisms of which are unknown. Intracellular Ca2+ handling by the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) plays a major role in contractility. We tested the hypothesis that defibrillation shocks interfere with Ca2+ transport function of cardiac SR. Rats anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium had bilateral electrodes implanted subcutaneously for transthoracic shocks. A series of 10 shocks, 10 s apart, at 0-250 V was delivered from a trapezoidal defibrillator. The hearts were rapidly removed, SR-enriched membrane vesicles were isolated, and ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis were determined. There was a marked, shock-related decline in Ca2+ uptake, whereas adenosinetriphosphatase activity remained unaltered. The polypeptide compositions were similar in control and shocked SR. In Langendorff hearts, shocks also decreased contractility and slowed relaxation. These data indicate that shocks with current densities similar to defibrillation depress Ca2+-pumping function of cardiac SR because of uncoupling of ATP hydrolysis and Ca2+ transport. Shock-induced impairment of Ca2+ pump function may underlie postshock myocardial dysfunction.
calcium pump activity; arrhythmia; fibrillation
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INTRODUCTION |
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HIGH-VOLTAGE DEFIBRILLATION shock remains the only reliable therapy available to salvage the life of a patient experiencing ventricular fibrillation. Unfortunately, the efficacy of defibrillation shocks is inconsistent both between individuals and even within the same individual between bouts of fibrillation (11). Although some mechanisms contributing to this variation are understood, such as poor electrode contact with high electrode impedance and improper electrode placement, other factors leading to variation and prolonged delay to return of sinus rhythm and protracted poor or slow recovery of hemodynamic function postshock are not readily explained. Return to sinus rhythm has been reported to occur <50% in out-of-hospital cardiac defibrillation (32). Clinically there are several instances of documented poor hemodynamics and depressed contractile function after defibrillation shocks. Various mechanisms have been suggested to contribute to this depression, including electrolyte shifts, ischemia, electro poration of the sarcolemma, postischemic myocardial stunning, as well as contributions from a variety of dysfunctions already present before the fibrillation bout.
In experimental models, electroporation has clearly been shown to occur
in the sarcolemma (11); however, recovery of membrane integrity is
rapid (seconds) and cannot readily explain protracted depression
lasting
10 min (15). Also, protracted alterations are seen in action
potential characteristics (16) that are not modified by agents that
affect sarcolemmal Ca2+ handling,
such as propranolol and verapamil (15). In the mammalian heart,
65-80% of the beat-to-beat
Ca2+ transient occurs via the
sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) (2). However, no studies have specifically
examined the effects of defibrillation shocks on
Ca2+ handling by the SR. The
objective of the present study was to test the hypothesis that
defibrillation shocks interfere with Ca2+ transport function of cardiac
SR.
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METHODS |
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Animals. Male Wistar rats (Charles River, Mississauga, Canada) weighing 250-300 g were housed in the animal quarters on a 12:12-h light-dark cycle and an ad libitum food and water regime. All animals were cared for in accordance with the guidelines of the Canadian Council on Animal Care, and the animal use protocol was approved by the University of Western Ontario Animal Care Committee. On the day of death, the rats were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (Somnitol, 60 mg/kg; Canada Packers, Hamilton, Canada) and 1-cm incisions were made on the left and right chest for subcutaneous insertion of two 0.8-cm diameter gold-plated circular electrodes (Grass Instruments, Quincy, MA) just beneath the skin on the chest wall.
A separate group of 10 rats were anesthetized, and indwelling femoral cannulas were implanted to monitor blood pressure throughout shock delivery and postshock; 6 similarly anesthetized rats served as controls. Cannulas were connected via pressure transducers (COBE, Bramalea, Canada) to a BioPac System Digital monitor (model MP100) and a personal computer to continuously monitor blood pressure. Blood pressure data from one shocked rat was not analyzed because of technical recording difficulties. In a third group of anesthetized rats, the hearts were rapidly removed and placed on a Langendorff apparatus perfused with Tyrode solution at 37°C and pH 7.4 for delivery of shocks and measurements of contractility and relaxation using ultrasound crystals. The 2.45-mm crystals were fixed on the long axis of the heart, from the apex to the groove at the anterior junction of the ventricles and the aortic root, using Vetbond glue (3M Animal Care Products, St. Paul, MN). A second pair of crystals was similarly attached to the mid left and right ventricular free walls. The crystals were attached to a Digital Sonomicrometer (Sonometrics, London, Canada), the output from which was passed to the BioPac system, which allowed on-line monitoring and off-line calculation of maximum and minimum distances and half-relaxation times. For each recording interval, 10 sequential contraction-relaxation measurements were obtained and averaged for each animal.Shock delivery. Two rats were connected in series to a trapezoidal defibrillator (model 2376 or 2394, Medtronic, Mississauga, Canada). Pairs were randomized to receive 10 shocks separated by 10 s at stored voltages of 0, 50, 100, 150, or 250 stored volts. Shocks were trapezoidal monophasic pulses of 5-ms duration from the 50-µF capacitor bank. Stored voltages and paired animals were selected to provide peak current per gram of heart for the rat heart, which approximated those of subthreshold and successful defibrillation shocks in patients and large animal studies (10, 11) and previous studies with shocks delivered to papillary muscle (17).
In pilot experiments in Langendorff hearts, it was determined that a 125-
series resistor was necessary to reduce the peak current to
approximate the current when the paired animals received transthoracic
150-V shocks. Therefore, data are only presented for the Langendorff
hearts with the 125-
series resistor. For shock delivery, two disk
electrodes were glued to 5-cm-long wooden dowels taped to the opposite
arms of a tube clamp on a retort stand. Because the positioning of the
electrodes impeded the movement of the heart slightly, a baseline
recording measurement of contractility was taken before the clamp
and shock electrodes were positioned in contact with the heart with the
disks orthogonal to both pairs of ultrasound crystals. The
electrodes were removed after delivery of the last shock. At the end of
the 15-min recording interval, the hearts were removed for histological
examination.
Isolation of SR-enriched membrane vesicles. Immediately after the last shock, or ~1 min after electrode placement for control rats receiving no shocks, the hearts were rapidly removed, cleaned of major vessels and atria, and then washed in ice-cold 10 mM NaHCO3 (pH 6.8) buffer to remove blood, and the ventricular tissue was used for the isolation of SR membranes as described previously (28). Briefly, the tissue was minced and homogenized in 6 vols (based on ventricular weight) of ice-cold buffer (10 mM NaHCO3, pH 6.8) using a Brinkman Instruments Polytron homogenizer (3 bursts of 15-s duration with 30-s intervals, speed setting 8). The homogenate was centrifuged at 1,000 g for 10 min at 4°C. The supernatant was decanted and kept in an ice slurry. The pellet was resuspended in four times the ventricular weight of ice-cold buffer and then centrifuged at 1,000 g for 10 min at 4°C. The supernatant was decanted and combined with the first supernatant, and the pellet was discarded. The combined supernatant was centrifuged at 8,000 g for 20 min at 4°C. The supernatant was decanted, and the pellet was discarded. Solid KCl (44 mg/ml) was added to the supernatant (final concn 0.6 M), swirled to dissolve, and left on ice for 25 min and then centrifuged at 40,000 g for 60 min at 4°C. The supernatant was discarded, and the pellet containing SR-enriched membrane vesicles was resuspended in a 10 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris)-maleate-100 mM KCl buffer (pH 6.8) to give a protein concentration of ~3 mg/ml. Protein was determined using the method of Lowry et al. (18) using bovine serum albumin as a standard.
Preparation of heart homogenates. In addition to SR, homogenates of ventricular myocardium from control and shocked rats were also used in some of the experiments. For this, the homogenates were prepared by homogenizing the ventricles in 10 vols (based on ventricular weight) of 10 mM Tris-maleate-100 mM KCl buffer (pH 6.8) using a Polytron PT-10 homogenizer (3 bursts of 15-s duration with 30-s interval, speed setting 8), returning the beaker to the ice between bursts. In the second experiment, in which the blood pressure was recorded, hearts were removed 15 min after the last shock, or 20 min after surgery for nonshocked control rats, for preparation of homogenates.
Determination of
Ca2+ uptake and
Ca2+-ATPase
activities.
ATP-dependent, oxalate-facilitated
Ca2+ uptake by SR and cardiac
homogenates was determined using a Millipore filtration technique as
detailed elsewhere (20). The standard incubation medium (total volume 1 ml) contained (in mM) 50 Tris-maleate (pH 6.8), 5 MgCl2, 2.5 ATP, 120 KCl, 5 potassium oxalate, 5 NaN3, and 0.1 ethylene glycol-bis(
-aminoethyl
ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid (EGTA), membrane or homogenate fraction (30 µg protein in SR, 80 µg protein in homogenate), and varying concentrations of
45CaCl2
(8,000-10,000
counts · min
1 · nmol
1).
All assays were performed at 37°C. The
Ca2+ uptake reaction was initiated
by the addition of membrane fraction after preincubation of the rest of
the assay components for 3 min. The free
Ca2+ concentration in the assay
medium was determined according to the computer program of Fabiato (4).
The data on Ca2+ concentration
dependence on Ca2+ uptake were
analyzed using nonlinear regression curve fitting using the SigmaPlot
program (Jandel Scientific). The data were fit to the equation
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-32P]ATP was used
instead of nonradioactive ATP and nonradioactive CaCl2 was used instead of
45CaCl2.
To determine the basal ATPase
(Mg2+-ATPase) activity, assays
were also carried out in the absence of
Ca2+ and in the presence of 0.2 mM
EGTA. The incubations were carried out at 37°C for 3 min, and the
reaction was stopped by the addition of 1 ml 12% trichloroacetic
acid-2 mM
KH2PO4.
Next, 0.1 ml each of 25 mM ATP and 0.1% bovine serum albumin were
added to the tubes. The tubes were centrifuged (3,000 revolutions/min,
10 min) and the 32P released from
[
-32P]ATP was
extracted and quantified as described by Sulakhe and Drummond (27). The
basal ATPase activity was subtracted from the enzyme activity measured
in the presence of Ca2+ to obtain
Ca2+-ATPase activity.
Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Protein composition of cardiac SR isolated from control and shocked rats was determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as previously described (20).
Data analysis. The results are presented as means ± SE. Statistical significance was evaluated by Student's t-test. Regression lines were determined with nonlinear regression curve fitting using the SigmaPlot program. Blood pressure, contractility, and half-relaxation time were analyzed with analysis of variance (ANOVA) (treatment × subject design) and paired Student's t-test. A probability of <5% (P < 0.05) was taken as the level of significance.
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RESULTS |
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Figure 1 shows the effect of varying shock intensities on Ca2+ uptake by SR measured at a saturating free Ca2+ (8.2 µM) in the assay. Increasing shock voltage depressed the Ca2+ uptake activity of SR membranes in a dose-dependent manner. A plateau appeared to occur between 100 and 250 V, and the largest change occurred between 50 and 100 V. Even at the lowest voltage of 50 V, the decrease (~10%) was statistically significant.
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Figure 2 shows the time course of Ca2+ uptake by SR derived from control rats and rats receiving 150-V shocks. The rate of Ca2+ uptake, measured in the presence of 8.2 µM free Ca2+ in the assay medium, was significantly lower (~33%) in SR from the shocked rats compared with that from the control rats (Fig. 2A). The diminished rates of Ca2+ uptake by SR from shocked rats persisted when the Ca2+ uptake assay medium was supplemented with ruthenium red (50 µM), an SR Ca2+-release channel blocker (Refs. 3, 19; Fig. 2B). Therefore, the observed depression in Ca2+ uptake activity of SR from the shocked rats does not appear to be caused by an increase in the rate of Ca2+ release from the SR. Ruthenium red augmented the rates of Ca2+ uptake by SR from both control and shocked rats to a similar extent (~40%). Thus the drug was equally effective in blocking Ca2+ release from SR derived from control and shocked rats.
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Figure 3 shows the effects of varying
Ca2+ concentrations on the
Ca2+ uptake activities of SR from
control rats and rats receiving 150-V shocks. When the free
Ca2+ concentration in the assay
medium was varied from 0.237 to 8.241 µM, SR from shocked rats showed
significantly lower rates (56 to 61%;
P < 0.05) of
Ca2+ uptake than the membranes
from control rats at all Ca2+
concentrations tested. The kinetic parameters of
Ca2+ uptake derived from these
data indicated that the
Vmax of
Ca2+ uptake by SR, but not the
K0.5 for
Ca2+, was altered in the
shocked rats
[Vmax (nmol
Ca2+ · mg
1 · min
1):
control, 66.3 ± 1.3; shocked, 40.1 ± 1.4;
K0.5 for
Ca2+ (µM): control, 1.14 ± 0.05; shocked, 1.04 ± 0.07;
nH: control, 2.0 ± 0.1; shocked, 2.0 ± 0.2].
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To exclude the possibility that differences in the relative purity of SR membranes isolated from control and shocked rats contributed to the observed difference in the Ca2+ uptake activities of these membranes, additional experiments were performed using unfractionated cardiac muscle homogenates from control and shocked (150 V) rats. In these experiments, Ca2+ uptake activities were measured at a saturating free Ca2+ concentration (8.2 µM) using cardiac tissue homogenates as well as SR isolated from the same hearts (control and shocked). The results showed significantly reduced Ca2+ uptake activity in both homogenates and SR from shocked compared with control rats (Fig. 4). The magnitude of shock-induced depression of Ca2+ uptake activity was similar in SR (31%) and homogenate (36%) fractions from shocked compared with control rats (Fig. 4). The data from these experiments also showed that the relative enrichment in the Ca2+ uptake activity of SR compared with homogenate was similar (~9-fold) in the case of control and shocked rats. Thus it is unlikely that differences in the relative purity of SR preparations from control and shocked rats contributed to the observed differences in Ca2+ uptake activity. In further support of this, the polypeptide composition of SR (determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) derived from the hearts of control and shocked (150 V) rats was found to be essentially similar (Fig. 5). Scanning and quantification of the electropherograms did not reveal any significant difference in the amount of protein in individual peptide bands including the ~105-kDa band representing Ca2+-ATPase. The 97.4-kDa peptide band, which presumably represents phosphorylase, was, however, diminished in the SR from shocked rats.
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In additional experiments, we examined whether the observed
shock-induced depression in the
Ca2+ uptake activity of SR was
also accompanied by concomitant impairment in the energy transduction
function of the Ca2+-pumping
ATPase. In these experiments, ATP-dependent
Ca2+ uptake and
Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis
were determined using the same SR preparations isolated from control
and shocked (150 V) rats. The results showed that the
Ca2+-uptake activity but not the
Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis was
depressed in SR from shocked rats (Fig. 6).
The shock-induced depression in
Ca2+ uptake appeared to parallel
cardiac function abnormalities as demonstrated by the transient
reduction in blood pressure monitored during shock delivery and
postshock. Systolic, mean, and diastolic pressures were all depressed
significantly at 30 and 60 s postshock. There was a rebound at
5-10 min postshock (P = not
significant), with eight of nine rats having pressures above baseline
values at 5 min. All values had returned to baseline preshock values ~15 min postshock (Table 1). Uptake of
Ca2+ by homogenates derived from
the ventricular myocardium of rats killed 15 min after shock delivery
averaged 13.3 ± 2.6 nmol · µg
protein
1 · min
1
(n = 6), which did not differ from
uptake values of similarly operated, nonshocked control rats (15.6 ± 3.1 nmol · µg
protein
1 · min
1,
n = 5).
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To determine the effects of shocks on contractile function in the absence of hormonal and/or autonomic influence, shocks were also delivered to hearts supported on the Langendorff apparatus, with contractility/relaxation measured with ultrasound crystals (Fig. 7). There was a significant reduction in shortening of the distance between the two chambers (short axis, P < 0.01) and a similar trend in the shortening in the long axis, which did not reach significance (P < 0.27). The half-relaxation time increased in all six hearts, on average approximately doubled at 1 min postshock (211.5 ± 58.4 ms) from baseline (112 ± 26.3 ms, P < 0.05). However, there was considerable variability between hearts in the subsequent responses at 5, 10, and 15 min postshock, with all six hearts returning towards baseline by 15 min (Fig. 7C).
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DISCUSSION |
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The present results demonstrate that the ATP-energized
Ca2+ uptake activity of cardiac SR
isolated from rats receiving defibrillation shocks is significantly
depressed (35-40%) compared with controls. The shock-induced
depression in Ca2+ uptake activity
of SR was voltage dependent but was not accompanied by alterations in
the Ca2+-ATPase content of the SR,
Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis, or
the apparent affinity of the
Ca2+-ATPase for
Ca2+. Thus the shock-induced
depression in Ca2+ uptake activity
of the SR is apparently caused by impaired efficiency of coupling ATP
hydrolysis to Ca2+ transport. The
mechanistic basis of this shock-induced uncoupling of ATP hydrolysis
and Ca2+ transport is unclear at
present. Altered Ca2+ transport
activities without parallel alterations in ATPase activities have been
encountered in a number of instances, indicating that the intrinsic
ATP-hydrolyzing activity of the transport system is not the sole
determinant of the ion transport function. For example,
1) binding of anti-ATPase antibodies
to SR membranes has been found to cause marked inhibition of
Ca2+ transport without altering
ATPase activity and passive permeability to
Ca2+ of the SR membranes (29).
2) Diminished
Ca2+ transport rates and enhanced
ATPase activities have been observed in reconstituted
"Ca2+ pump" vesicles of SR
compared with original membranes. The decline in
Ca2+ transport rates could not be
accounted for by altered Ca2+
permeability of the reconstituted vesicles (23, 24).
3) Tryptic cleavage at a specific
region of the ATPase (26) or a single amino acid substitution
(Tyr763
Gly) in the
primary structure of the ATPase (1) was found to abolish
Ca2+ transport function while ATP
hydrolysis still remained functional. 4) Aging was found to be accompanied
by a decline in the Ca2+ uptake
but not the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase
activity of SR from rat cardiac (20, 21) and slow-twitch skeletal
muscles (22).
In the present study, effective blockade of the ryanodine receptor/Ca2+-release channel by ruthenium red (3, 19) did not overcome the shock-induced depression in Ca2+ uptake activity of SR. Therefore, it is unlikely that a shock-induced enhancement in Ca2+ release through the Ca2+-release channel contributes to the observed depression in the Ca2+ uptake activity of SR. Injury to the cardiac sarcolemmal membrane (electroporation) after defibrillation shocks has been reported (13). Whether defibrillation shocks induce any electroporation of the SR is not known. Myocardial functional deficits that may occur as a result of electroporation of the sarcolemma are short lived, and recovery rapidly occurs within seconds (12, 13). The defibrillation-induced impairment in SR function reported here, apparently, persists for minutes.
It is possible that shock-induced depression in the Ca2+-sequestering activity of SR may contribute to the depression in cardiac function observed in some patients after defibrillation shocks (10). The uptake and release of Ca2+ by the SR is central to the maintenance of a normal excitation-contraction-relaxation cycle of the heart (2, 5, 14). The ATP-energized Ca2+ uptake activity of isolated SR vesicles is widely accepted as the manifestation of the Ca2+-sequestering (Ca2+ pump) function of these membranes in vivo (5, 9). Thus the depressed Ca2+ sequestration by SR membranes would be expected to reflect a similar depression in vivo. Such diminution in SR function in vivo would lead to prolongation of cardiac muscle relaxation and thus impaired mechanical restitution. Furthermore, with depressed Ca2+ uptake into the SR compartment, there would be diminished release of Ca2+ for subsequent contractions and this would compromise cardiac contractile force.
When 150-V shocks were delivered to rats that had indwelling femoral arterial cannulas, all blood pressure measures were reduced immediately postshock (P < 0.01). These transient blood pressure responses remained below baseline for all animals beyond 60 s, had rebounded by 5-10 min, and subsequently returned to baseline by 15 min. This rebound is consistent with the previously demonstrated autonomic activation postshock (30), which would also alter sarcolemmal Ca2+ transients postshock (2, 10, 14, 30). The return to baseline corresponded to a time when the Ca2+ uptake activity of heart homogenates also did not differ from those of similarly operated control nonshocked rats. This time course of 10-15 min for recovery is similar to our previous finding of depressant electrophysiological effects after similar intensity shocks delivered to isolated papillary muscles (16, 17).
When shocks were delivered directly to the hearts on the Langendorff apparatus, they resulted in an immediate prolongation of relaxation. There was a disparity between the magnitude and duration of effects on contractility and relaxation and, indeed, between contractility measured in the two different axes. Some of these differences could be due to differences in effects of the shocks on the SR and sarcolemma, as well as the current density profiles through the different regions of the myocardium. There were also differences between the time course of effects seen on the Langendorff heart and the whole animal or isolated papillary muscle. One possible factor contributing to these differences may be the relative distribution of current delivered directly to the heart in the Langendorff hearts versus that which was shunted either through the tissue bath containing the papillary muscle or through the rest of the body in the whole animal transthoracic shock study. In the Langendorff heart, it was not possible to match resistance, peak current, peak voltage, and total energy delivery to that of the whole animal, and these differences could explain some of the differences in results. Determining the relative contributions of these factors requires consideration of current distribution, heart geometry, and electrode configurations (30), which is beyond the scope of the present investigation. On the other hand, it is noteworthy that the postshock restitution response of the Langendorff hearts demonstrated considerably more variability than the contractility responses as a group and even in the same heart. Variability in postshock cardiac function is one characteristic also clearly evident in patients after defibrillation shock (10, 11).
It is possible that this depression in Ca2+ uptake contributes to the postshock myocardial dysfunction observed in some patients after a defibrillation shock (10). Why this might differ from patient to patient is unclear. Age-associated diminution in general cardiac performance is well known, and there is an age-associated decline in SR Ca2+ pump activity (6, 20), which might contribute to poor cardiac performance postshock and inability to pace the heart (16). However, there does not appear to be a good correlation between patient characteristics and defibrillation success or postshock recovery (10, 11).
Additional factors that may contribute to poor cardiac performance postshock include the magnitude and characteristics of the delivered defibrillation energy. A relationship between energy delivery and myocardial damage has been demonstrated previously (7, 25, 30), which is consistent with the shock intensity-related depression of SR Ca2+ pump function observed in the present study. Another factor that may contribute to depressed function is alteration in the phosphorylation status of Ca2+ cycling proteins at the level of the SR (5, 8, 14, 33) and/or myofilaments (31). At present, we have not investigated this possibility. Also, the observed decrease in SR-associated phosphorylase suggests that there may be other subcellular alterations not yet determined that may contribute to postshock cardiac dysfunction. These remain to be determined.
In conclusion, we have demonstrated that trapezoidal direct current shocks, with parameters similar to defibrillation shocks, elicit protracted and dose-dependent depression of Ca2+-sequestering activity of cardiac SR. The impairment of SR Ca2+ pump function was caused by an uncoupling of ATP hydrolysis from Ca2+ transport. This shock-induced impairment of Ca2+ pump function is suggested to contribute to postshock myocardial dysfunction, consistent with the shock-induced reduction in contractility and relaxation.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Special thanks are extended to Maria Densmore, Kim Wood, and Ande Xu for technical assistance.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was supported in part by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario.
Address for reprint requests: D. L. Jones, Depts. of Physiology and Medicine, Univ. of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 5C1.
Received 29 October 1996; accepted in final form 21 August 1997.
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