Molecular Arrhythmias & Drugs Flashcards

1
Q

How are arrhythmias acquired?

A

MI, ischemia, acidosis, alkalosis, electrolyte abnormalities

Drug toxicity is common cause

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2
Q

Drugs:

  1. Are useful in treating ___ arrhythmias
  2. Are used with ICDs to ___ frequency of arrhythmic episodes, ____ battery life, ___ number of unpleasant ICD discharges
  3. Would be more useful if we understood __ and __
A
  1. some arrhythmias (supraventricular)
  2. Decrease frequency, increase battery life, decrease unpleasant episodes
  3. mechanism of action and molecular targets
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3
Q

What are the 4 primary targets of antiarrhythmic drugs

A

Mneumonic: “Some Block Potassium Channels”

  1. Na channels (Class I)
  2. B-adrenergic receptors (Class II)
  3. K channels (Class III)
  4. Ca channels (Class IV)
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4
Q

Torsades de pointes

A

Twisting of the points due to afterdepolarization occurring too early, can decay into ventricular fibrillation

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5
Q

NCX1 is responsible for what

A

Removing calcium from cytosol. Ca leave, Na enter.

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6
Q

Explain how you end up getting a LQT with K+ issues

A

Mutations in K+ channels result in decreased expression of K+ channels, which reduces the size of the K+ channel which normally ends Phase 2 of contraction. Phase 3 is delayed and you get LQT

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7
Q

Explain how you end up getting a LQT with Na+ issues

A

Mutation sin Na channel frequency prevent the Na channels from inactivating completely… even if it’s 95% inactivated, there’s still enough Na to continue flowing and prolonging Phase 2. Get LQT

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8
Q

Brugada Syndrome

A

AKA “Sudden Unexplained Death Syndrome”

> 30 mutations in cardiac Na+ channel (Nav1.5)
–> Reduce peak inward Na+ current in ventricular myocytes

Some patients have mutations (A39V, G490R) in the principle subunit Cav1.2
§ Appear to cause a large reduction in the magnitude of the L-type Ca2+ current which may be a consequence of impaired membrane trafficking
–> less calcium coming in –> Significantly shortened QT interval indicative of a shortened ventricular AP

  • note: more brief plateau phase 2 than Timothy syndrome
  • Note: Ventricular fibrillation -> survival rate of 40% by 5 years old
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9
Q

Finnish familial arrhythmia

A

Protein yotiao binds protein kinase A, cardiac Ca2+, and K+ channels

Yotiao anchors kinase to both Ca and Iks channels

Result: during increased sympathetic activity, not enough repolarizing K+ current to match increasing depolarizing Ca2+ current

Phase 2 is prolonged, cytosolic Ca2+ levels rise, triggering afterdeoplarizations and death

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10
Q

Inappropriate impulse initiation sources

A
  1. Ectopic foci - SA node is abnormally slow or fast. Note that infarcts can also trigger this
2. Triggered afterdepolarizations: triggered by APs
Early afterdepolarizations (EADs): appear during late phase 2 and phase 3, dependent upon re-activation of Ca2+  channels.
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11
Q

Re-entrant arrhythmias require 2 conditions

A
  1. uni-directional conduction block in a functional circuit
  2. Conduction time around circuit > refractory period.

For treatment, attack these!

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12
Q

Ca2+ entry during the prolonged QT interval triggers ___ via Ca2+ channel reactivation or ____ via NCX-dependent depolarization

A

EAD

DAD

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13
Q

Increased sympathetic tone increases the likelihood of ____ because Ca2+ influx is enhanced by B-adrenergic receptor activity

A

Triggered afterdepolarizations

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14
Q

What initiates re-entry?

What can re-entry result in?

A

Reentry occurs when there is a unidirectional block and slowed conduction through the reentry pathway

EAD or DAD, and re-entry can result in torsades de pointes

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15
Q

In many cases, arrhythmia is triggered by ___ but maintained by ____

A

Afterdepolarizations, maintained by re-entry

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16
Q

4 classes of drugs

A
  1. Class 1: blockers of V-G cardiac Na+ channels
  2. Class II: B-adrenergic receptor blockers
  3. Class III: drugs that prolong fast response phase 2 by delaying repolarization
  4. Class IV: blockers of V-G cardiac Ca 2+ channels
17
Q

Example of important unclassified drug

A

Adenosine

18
Q

Amiodarone class?

A

Class III with class I action too

19
Q

Class I drugs __ upstroke
Class Ib drugs ___ upstroke and ___ AP duration
Class Ia ___ phase ___ via ___ block

A
Class I drugs slow upstroke (all block Na)
Class Ib drugs show pure class 1 action: slow upstroke (phase 0), decrease AP duration (only block Na)
Class Ia  and Ic delay phase 3 onset via K+ channel block (block Na- lots for IC and K - very minimally for IC)
20
Q

Reduced upstroke velocity means there is ___ conduction velocity

A

reduced conduction velocity

21
Q

Examples of Class IA drugs

A
  1. quinidine
  2. procainamide
  3. disopyramide
22
Q

Examples of Class IB drugs

A
  1. lidocaine
  2. Mexiletine (use if can’t do electrotherapy)
  3. phenytoin
23
Q

Examples of Class IC drugs

A
  1. Propafenone
  2. Flecainide
  3. Encainide
24
Q

Timothy syndrome

A
  • Debilitating genetic disorder resulting in syncope, cardiac arrhythmias and sudden death.

Linked to de novo mutations in Cav1.2 (Recall that Cav1.2 is the principle subunit of the L-type Calcium Channel)

  • TS2 mutations profoundly suppress voltage-dependent inactivation of the calcium current
    § Because the current can’t be quickly inactivated, phase 2 of the AP is prolonged
    § Result = Prolonged QT syndrome (opposite of Brugada)
25
Q

Prolongation of QT intervals can lead to __________ which triggers arrythmias

A

afterdepolarizations → triggers arrhythmias→ maintained by re-reentry