Clinical and experimental data on the cardiac effects of acute hypernatremia are scarce and inconsistent. We aimed to determine and understand the effects of different levels of acute hypernatremia on the human ventricular action potential. We performed computer simulations using two different, very comprehensive models of the electrical activity of a single human ventricular cardiomyocyte, i.e., the Tomek-Rodriguez model following the O'Hara-Rudy dynamic (ORd) model and the Bartolucci-Passini-Severi model as published in 2020 (known as the ToR-ORd and BPS2020 models, respectively). Mild to extreme levels of hypernatremia were introduced into each model based on experimental data on the effects of hypernatremia on cell volume and individual ion currents. In both models, we observed an increase in the intracellular sodium and potassium concentrations, an increase in the peak amplitude of the intracellular calcium concentration, a hyperpolarization of the resting membrane potential, a prolongation of the action potential, an increase in the maximum upstroke velocity, and an increase in the threshold stimulus current at all levels of hypernatremia and all stimulus rates tested. The magnitude of all of these effects was relatively small in the case of mild to severe hypernatremia but substantial in the case of extreme hypernatremia. The effects on the action potential were related to an increase in the sodium-potassium pump current, an increase in the sodium-calcium exchange current, a decrease in the rapid and slow delayed rectifier potassium currents, and an increase in the fast and late sodium currents. The effects of mild to severe hypernatremia on the electrical activity of human ventricular cardiomyocytes are relatively small. In the case of extreme hypernatremia, the effects are more pronounced, especially regarding the increase in threshold stimulus current.
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