Acute effects of alcohol on cardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmogenesis: Insights from multiscale in silico analyses
Jazyk angličtina Země Velká Británie, Anglie Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural, práce podpořená grantem
Grantová podpora
R01 HL131517
NHLBI NIH HHS - United States
R01 HL136389
NHLBI NIH HHS - United States
R01 HL089598
NHLBI NIH HHS - United States
PubMed
32710981
DOI
10.1016/j.yjmcc.2020.07.007
PII: S0022-2828(20)30229-7
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- Arrhythmia, Atrial fibrillation, Cardiac electrophysiology, Computational modeling, Ethanol,
- MeSH
- akční potenciály účinky léků MeSH
- elektrofyziologické jevy účinky léků MeSH
- ethanol škodlivé účinky MeSH
- fibróza MeSH
- iontové kanály metabolismus MeSH
- kardiomyocyty účinky léků metabolismus MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- mezerový spoj účinky léků metabolismus MeSH
- počítačová simulace MeSH
- remodelace cév účinky léků MeSH
- srdce účinky léků patofyziologie MeSH
- srdeční arytmie patologie patofyziologie MeSH
- srdeční síně účinky léků patologie patofyziologie MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural MeSH
- Názvy látek
- ethanol MeSH
- iontové kanály MeSH
Acute excessive ethyl alcohol (ethanol) consumption alters cardiac electrophysiology and can evoke cardiac arrhythmias, e.g., in 'holiday heart syndrome'. Ethanol acutely modulates numerous targets in cardiomyocytes, including ion channels, Ca2+-handling proteins and gap junctions. However, the mechanisms underlying ethanol-induced arrhythmogenesis remain incompletely understood and difficult to study experimentally due to the multiple electrophysiological targets involved and their potential interactions with preexisting electrophysiological or structural substrates. Here, we employed cellular- and tissue-level in-silico analyses to characterize the acute effects of ethanol on cardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmogenesis. Acute electrophysiological effects of ethanol were incorporated into human atrial and ventricular cardiomyocyte computer models: reduced INa, ICa,L, Ito, IKr and IKur, dual effects on IK1 and IK,ACh (inhibition at low and augmentation at high concentrations), and increased INCX and SR Ca2+ leak. Multiscale simulations in the absence or presence of preexistent atrial fibrillation or heart-failure-related remodeling demonstrated that low ethanol concentrations prolonged atrial action-potential duration (APD) without effects on ventricular APD. Conversely, high ethanol concentrations abbreviated atrial APD and prolonged ventricular APD. High ethanol concentrations promoted reentry in tissue simulations, but the extent of reentry promotion was dependent on the presence of altered intercellular coupling, and the degree, type, and pattern of fibrosis. Taken together, these data provide novel mechanistic insight into the potential proarrhythmic interactions between a preexisting substrate and acute changes in cardiac electrophysiology. In particular, acute ethanol exposure has concentration-dependent electrophysiological effects that differ between atria and ventricles, and between healthy and diseased hearts. Low concentrations of ethanol can have anti-fibrillatory effects in atria, whereas high concentrations promote the inducibility and maintenance of reentrant atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, supporting a role for limiting alcohol intake as part of cardiac arrhythmia management.
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