Abstract

1. The effects of long-term administration of oral amiodarone on transmembrane action potential and contraction of ventricular muscle were investigated in rabbits. 2. ECGs of rabbits that received oral amiodarone 50 mg or 100 mg kg-1 daily for 4 weeks, showed a significant prolongation of RR, QT and corrected QT (QTc) intervals, whereas PQ and QRS were unaffected. Serum and myocardial tissue amiodarone concentrations were 0.14-0.18 micrograms ml-1 and 1.47-3.63 micrograms g-1 wet wt. respectively. 3. Right ventricular papillary muscles isolated from treated rabbits were characterized by a moderate prolongation of action potential duration (APD) compared with controls. A slight decrease of the maximum upstroke velocity (Vmax) was also observed at the higher dose. The APD prolongation by chronic amiodarone, unlike acute effects of sotalol, E-4031, Cs+ and 4-aminopyridine, did not show marked reverse use-dependence. 4. APD and Vmax restitution following slow basic stimuli (0.03 Hz) were unaffected by chronic treatment with amiodarone. 5. Acute application of amiodarone (10 microM) caused a significant decrease in APD and developed tension, as well as a marked use-dependent Vmax inhibition with fast recovery kinetics. 6. These findings suggest that a major and consistent electro-physiological effect of chronic amiodarone is repolarization delay (Class-III action) showing minimal frequency-dependence. However, when amiodarone above a certain concentration is present in the extracellular space, a fast kinetic Class-I action would be added as an acute effect.

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