Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and uremia increase the risk of heart disease and sudden cardiac death. Coronary artery disease can only partly account for this. The remaining mechanistic links between CKD and sudden death are elusive, but may involve cardiac arrhythmias. For the present study, we hypothesized that a thorough electrophysiological study in mice with CKD would provide us valuable information that could aid in the identification of additional underlying causes of sudden cardiac death in patients with kidney disease. Partial (5/6) nephrectomy (NX) in mice induced mild CKD: plasma urea in NX was 24 ± 1 mmol/L (n = 23) versus 12 ± 1 mmol/L (n = 22) in sham‐operated control mice (P < 0.05). Echocardiography did not identify structural or mechanical remodeling in NX mice. Baseline ECG parameters were comparable in conscious NX and control mice; however, the normal 24‐h diurnal rhythm in QRS duration was lost in NX mice. Moreover, β‐adrenergic stimulation (isoprenaline, 200 μg/kg intraperitoneally) prolonged QRS duration in conscious NX mice (from 12 ± 1 to 15 ± 2 msec, P < 0.05), but not in sham‐operated controls (from 13 ± 1 to 13 ± 2 msec, P > 0.05). No spontaneous arrhythmias were observed in conscious NX mice, and intracardiac pacing in anesthetized mice showed a comparable arrhythmia vulnerability in NX and sham‐operated mice. Isoprenaline (2 mg/kg intraperitoneally) changed the duration of the QRS complex from 11.2 ± 0.4 to 11.9 ± 0.5 (P = 0.06) in NX mice and from 10.7 ± 0.6 to 10.6 ± 0.6 (P = 0.50) in sham‐operated mice. Ex vivo measurements of cardiac ventricular conduction velocity were comparable in NX and sham mice. Transcriptional activity of Scn5a, Gja1 and several profibrotic genes was similar in NX and sham mice. We conclude that proper kidney function is necessary to maintain diurnal variation in QRS duration and that sympathetic regulation of the QRS duration is altered in kidney disease.

Highlights

  • More than 20 million Americans are living with chronic kidney diseases (CKD) and eight million of these have moderate or severe CKD (Levey et al 2003)

  • There is a trend toward prolongation of the QRS complex in anesthetized NX mice after b-adrenergic receptor stimulation (Fig. 5B); ex vivo determination of conduction velocity and analysis of expression of key genes encoding proteins implicated in conduction and fibrosis provide no underlying mechanism

  • A rat model of CKD based on spontaneous cystic kidney disease due to an inherited samcystin protein defect has moderately elevated plasma urea levels (Hsueh et al 2014), comparable to the levels shown in Figure 1A. (Note: The correct unit of blood urea nitrogen in Table 1 of reference (Hsueh et al 2014) is probably mg/mL, not mg/L)

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Summary

Introduction

More than 20 million Americans are living with chronic kidney diseases (CKD) and eight million of these have moderate or severe CKD (Levey et al 2003). Having CKD places the patient at increased risk of sudden cardiac death (Sarnak et al 2003; Weiner et al 2004; Pun et al 2009; Green and Roberts 2010; Herzog et al 2011). Coronary atherosclerosis is often found in patients with CKD and is associated with a higher frequency of arrhythmic death than in the general population (Herzog et al 2011). Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society.

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