Cascio Wayne E, Yang Hua, Muller-Borer Barbara J, Johnson Timothy A
Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, The Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27834, USA.
J Electrocardiol. 2005 Oct;38(4 Suppl):55-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2005.06.019.
Sudden cardiac death accounts for more than half of all cardiovascular deaths in the US, and a large proportion of these deaths are attributed to ischemia-induced ventricular fibrillation. As such, the mechanisms underlying the initiation and maintenance of these lethal rhythms are of significant clinical and scientific interest. In large animal hearts, regional ischemia induces two phases of ventricular arrhythmia. The first phase (1A) occurs between 5 and 7 min after arrest of perfusion. This phase is associated with membrane depolarization, a mild intracellular and extracellular acidification and a small membrane depolarization. A second phase (1B) of ventricular arrhythmia occurs between 20 and 30 minutes after arrest of perfusion. This phase occurs at a time when ischemia-induced K+ and pH changes are relatively stable. The arrhythmia is presumed to relate to the process of cell-to-cell electrical uncoupling because a rapid increase of tissue impedance precedes the onset of the arrhythmia. Of note is that tissue resistance is primarily determined by the conductance properties of the gap junctions accounting for cell-to-cell coupling. Impulse propagation in heart is determined by active and passive membrane properties. An important passive cable property that is modulated by ischemia is intercellular resistance and is determined primarily by gap junctional conductance. As such changes in Impulse propagation during myocardial ischemia are determined by contemporaneous changes in active and passive membrane properties. Cellular K loss, intracellular and extracellular acidosis and membrane depolarization are important factors decreasing excitatory currents, while the collapse of the extracellular compartment and cell-to-cell electrical uncoupling increase the resistance to current flow. The time-course of cellular coupling is closely linked to a number of physiological processes including depletion of ATP, and accumulation of intracellular Ca2+. Hence, interventions such as ischemic preconditioning attenuate the effect of subsequent ischemia, delay the onset of cell-to-cell electrical uncoupling and likewise delay the onset of ischemia-induced arrhythmia.
在美国,心源性猝死占所有心血管疾病死亡人数的一半以上,其中很大一部分死亡归因于缺血性心室颤动。因此,这些致命性心律失常的起始和维持机制具有重大的临床和科学研究价值。在大型动物心脏中,局部缺血会诱发两个阶段的室性心律失常。第一阶段(1A)发生在灌注停止后5至7分钟之间。此阶段与膜去极化、轻度细胞内和细胞外酸化以及小幅度膜去极化有关。室性心律失常的第二阶段(1B)发生在灌注停止后20至30分钟之间。此阶段发生在缺血诱导的钾离子和pH值变化相对稳定之时。据推测,心律失常与细胞间电脱耦过程有关,因为在心律失常发作之前组织阻抗会迅速增加。值得注意的是,组织电阻主要由负责细胞间耦联的缝隙连接的电导特性决定。心脏中的冲动传播由主动和被动膜特性决定。缺血可调节的一个重要被动电缆特性是细胞间电阻,其主要由缝隙连接电导决定。因此,心肌缺血期间冲动传播的变化由主动和被动膜特性的同步变化决定。细胞钾离子流失、细胞内和细胞外酸中毒以及膜去极化是降低兴奋性电流的重要因素,而细胞外间隙的崩溃和细胞间电脱耦会增加电流流动的阻力。细胞耦联的时间进程与许多生理过程密切相关,包括ATP耗竭和细胞内钙离子积累。因此,诸如缺血预处理等干预措施可减轻后续缺血的影响,延迟细胞间电脱耦的发生,同样也会延迟缺血性心律失常的发生。