Escande D, Coraboeuf E, Planché C, Lacour-Gayet F
Basic Res Cardiol. 1986 May-Jun;81(3):244-57. doi: 10.1007/BF01907407.
The capability of generating spontaneous diastolic depolarization and automaticity was investigated in vitro by means of standard microelectrode techniques in 50 human atrial preparations. Samples were classified within two groups: group 1 was composed of 12 well-polarized preparations exhibiting action potentials that were fast responses (mean maximum diastolic potential: -75.5 mV and Vmax greater than 100 V/s); group 2 was composed of 38 partially-depolarized samples (mean maximum diastolic potential: -50.3 mV and Vmax less than 10 V/s) and was further divided into two subgroups. Subgroup 2A consisted of 20 spontaneously beating preparations and subgroup 2B consisted of 18 non-automatic partially-depolarized specimens. Highly-polarized fibers from group 1, although exhibiting a slight diastolic depolarization which was almost entirely suppressed by 2 mM caesium, never presented spontaneous activity under our experimental conditions. 90% of automatic fibers from subgroup 2A were sampled from dilated atria. In automatic preparations, diastolic depolarization was usually separated into two phases: an initial phase, also present in non-automatic fibers, and a late phase. Changes in the initial phase were not accompanied by concomitant changes in the spontaneous rate. Abnormal automaticity was clearly related to the late diastolic phase (absent in non-automatic fibers), the generation of which appeared to be a specific property of automatic fibers. The use of K conductance inhibitors (caesium, 4-aminopyridine, barium, low K solutions) provided indirect evidence that neither delayed outward ix current nor if type inward current are principally responsible for abnormal automaticity.