Abstract

The hypothesis that digitalis-induced arrhythmias occur when Na,K-ATPase inhibition exhausts the sodium pump reverse capacity, producing an accumulation of intracellular Na +, was tested by reducing the reserve capacity in isolated left atrial muscle of guinea pig heart and estimating specific digoxin binding and Na,K-ATPase activity in atrial muscle homogenized at the onset of digoxin-induced arrhythmias. Reductions in reserve capacity were produced by either increasing the stimulation frequency of the atrial muscle or adding a sodium ionophore, monensin, to the media bathing the tissue. As stimulation frequency was increased, both the time required to produce arrhythmias with a given concentration of digoxin and the amount of digoxin bound to sarcolemmal Na,K-ATPase at the onset of arrhythmias were reduced. Similarly, monensin treatment produced reductions in the time to arrhythmia and in digoxin binding and Na,K-ATPase inhibition observed at the onset of arrhythmias. These results support the above proposal suggesting that a decrease in reserve capacity of the sodium pump enhances cardiac sensitivity to digitalis-induced arrhythmias.

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