Quasthoff S, Spuler A, Spittelmeister W, Lehmann-Horn F, Grafe P
Physiologisches Institut, Universität München, F.R.G.
Eur J Pharmacol. 1990 Sep 4;186(1):125-8. doi: 10.1016/0014-2999(90)94068-9.
Isolated fibre bundles from myotonic human skeletal muscle showed after-contractions and spontaneous mechanical activity. The K+ channel openers cromakalim (10-100 mumols/l) and EMD 52962 (1-10 mumols/l) completely suppressed these abnormalities in mechanical activity. Voltage-clamp experiments revealed that cromakalim (100 mumols/l) increased the membrane K+ conductance of isolated, non-myotonic human skeletal muscle fibres 4-fold; Cl- conductance was not altered. The data show that myotonia is suppressed by an increase in in membrane K+ conductance.