Osadchii O E
Department of Health Science and Technology, University of Aalborg, Aalborg, Denmark.
Acta Physiol (Oxf). 2017 Jul;220 Suppl 712:1-71. doi: 10.1111/apha.12902.
In cardiac patients, life-threatening tachyarrhythmia is often precipitated by abnormal changes in ventricular repolarization and refractoriness. Repolarization abnormalities typically evolve as a consequence of impaired function of outward K currents in cardiac myocytes, which may be caused by genetic defects or result from various acquired pathophysiological conditions, including electrical remodelling in cardiac disease, ion channel modulation by clinically used pharmacological agents, and systemic electrolyte disorders seen in heart failure, such as hypokalaemia. Cardiac electrical instability attributed to abnormal repolarization relies on the complex interplay between a provocative arrhythmic trigger and vulnerable arrhythmic substrate, with a central role played by the excessive prolongation of ventricular action potential duration, impaired intracellular Ca handling, and slowed impulse conduction. This review outlines the electrical activity of ventricular myocytes in normal conditions and cardiac disease, describes classical electrophysiological mechanisms of cardiac arrhythmia, and provides an update on repolarization-related surrogates currently used to assess arrhythmic propensity, including spatial dispersion of repolarization, activation-repolarization coupling, electrical restitution, TRIaD (triangulation, reverse use dependence, instability, and dispersion), and the electromechanical window. This is followed by a discussion of the mechanisms that account for the dependence of arrhythmic vulnerability on the location of the ventricular pacing site. Finally, the review clarifies the electrophysiological basis for cardiac arrhythmia produced by hypokalaemia, and gives insight into the clinical importance and pathophysiology of drug-induced arrhythmia, with particular focus on class Ia (quinidine, procainamide) and Ic (flecainide) Na channel blockers, and class III antiarrhythmic agents that block the delayed rectifier K channel (dofetilide).
在心脏病患者中,危及生命的快速性心律失常常由心室复极化和不应期的异常变化所诱发。复极化异常通常是由于心肌细胞外向钾电流功能受损所致,这可能由遗传缺陷引起,也可能源于各种获得性病理生理状况,包括心脏病中的电重构、临床使用的药物对离子通道的调节以及心力衰竭时出现的全身性电解质紊乱,如低钾血症。归因于复极化异常的心脏电不稳定依赖于促心律失常触发因素与易损性心律失常基质之间的复杂相互作用,其中心室动作电位持续时间过度延长、细胞内钙处理受损以及冲动传导减慢起着核心作用。本综述概述了正常情况下和心脏病时心室肌细胞的电活动,描述了心律失常的经典电生理机制,并介绍了目前用于评估心律失常倾向的复极化相关替代指标的最新情况,包括复极化的空间离散度、激活 - 复极化耦联、电恢复、TRIaD(三角测量、反向使用依赖性、不稳定性和离散度)以及机电窗。随后讨论了解释心律失常易感性对心室起搏部位依赖性的机制。最后,本综述阐明了低钾血症所致心律失常的电生理基础,并深入探讨了药物性心律失常的临床重要性和病理生理学,特别关注Ia类(奎尼丁、普鲁卡因胺)和Ic类(氟卡尼)钠通道阻滞剂以及阻断延迟整流钾通道的III类抗心律失常药物(多非利特)。