Abstract

Amiodarone is used extensively for the chronic treatment of life-threatening arrhythmias caused by ischemic heart disease. However, chronic therapy with this agent results in phospholipidosis in various tissues and it has been suggested that the inhibition of lysosomal phospholipase A by this drug contributes to this abnormality. Exogenous amiodarone has been shown to inhibit purified rat liver lysosomal phospholipase A1, as well as acid phospholipase activities of alveolar macrophage homogenates and those of snake venom phospholipase A2 and bacterial phospholipase C. The effects of drug treatment on heart have not been explored. The results described here demonstrate that amiodarone also significantly increases (37%, p less than 0.001) phospholipid content in cat hearts. This increase is proportionately distributed to all major phospholipid classes, with the exception of sphingomyelin which appears to increase more than the others. In addition, the data also show that following amiodarone treatment, the endogenous drug levels in the heart were sufficient to reduce in vitro losses of membrane phospholipid at 37 degrees C by inhibiting a variety of endogenous phospholipases at physiological (7.4), ischemic (6.2) and acidic (5.0) pH values. This protection is more pronounced at acidic pH values than at physiological pH. Endogenous amiodarone also affects myocardial phospholipase activities towards exogenous phosphatidylcholine and again the extent of inhibition is more at acidic pH. These results suggest that amiodarone induces phospholipidosis in the heart by inhibiting phospholipid catabolism and that its antiarrhythmic properties may reside in its ability to modulate alkaline, neutral and acid phospholipase activities in ischemia. To what extent amiodarone metabolites (desethylamiodarone and bis-desethylamiodarone) are involved in these actions remains to be determined.

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