Abstract

It has long been discussed why dihydropyridine calcium antagonists are less cardioactive than other calcium antagonists at doses equally effective on vascular smooth muscle [5, 12]. Recently, it has been reported that dihydropyridine calcium antagonists, unlike other calcium antagonists, inhibit adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase in various tissue preparations [2, 8, 10]. It has also been reported that intracellularly applied adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate increases the slow inward current in heart cells [1, 11, 13]. Therefore, present experiments were carried out to elucidate the effects of intracellularly applied calcium antagonists on the slow inward current of single ventricular cells with the patch-clamp, 'whole-cell recording', technique [3]. Nifedipine, nicardipine and isobutylmethylxanthine, when applied intracellularly using the patch-clamp microelectrode, increased the plateau and the duration of action potentials of single ventricular heart cells of the guinea-pig. The augmentation of the action potential was abolished by superfusing the cell with nifedipine. D600 and diltiazem when applied either intra- or extra-cellularly decreased the plateau and the duration of the action potential. Under voltage clamp conditions, intracellularly applied nifedipine, nicardipine and isobutylmethylxanthine increased the slow inward current, whereas D600 and diltiazem decreased the current. The holding current and the current at the end of 200-ms clamp pulses were not modified. Thus, dihydropyridine calcium antagonists probably increase the slow inward current from the inside of the cell and attenuate the calcium entry blocking activities in heart cells. This must partly be a reason why dihydropyridine calcium antagonists are less cardioactive than D600 and diltiazem at doses equally effective on vascular smooth muscle.

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