Abstract

Characteristic features of the electromechanical coupling of the myocardium were studied in patients with heart failure caused by rheumatic heart disease. Experiments were performed on muscle trabeculae isolated from the right atrial auricle in the course of surgical correction of a valve defect. The trabeculae displayed two types of mechanical responses, recorded in the isometric mode, to the postrest test. In the type I response, the mechanical restitution had an ascending pattern, the interval between electrical stimuli increasing. In type II, the mechanical restitution pattern was descending. Amiodarone (1 μM) treatment of the myocardium with the type I response enhanced the postrest potentiation of the mechanical response of trabeculae by more than 30%, but it had no effect on the muscles with the type II response. All patients whose biopsy material displayed the type II response had long episodes of atrial fibrillation. It is conceivable that the observed differences in the rhythm inotropic dependence of the human myocardium in rheumatic heart disease reflect different degrees of cardiomyocyte remodeling. The direction of this process is determined by the range of adaptive changes in intracellular structures, primarily, the sarcoplasmic reticulum.

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