Antiarrhythmic Drugs Flashcards
Normal myocardial electrophysiology?
The pumping function of the heart provides a coordinated contraction of all four parts of the heart,
which depends on the conduction system propagating the electrical impulses from the sinoatrial node (pacemaker) to all other parts of the heart.
The impulses spread from the sinus node, located in the right atrium, to the
atrioventricular node (AV node), located in the lower part of the atrial septum, and
then through His bundle they reach Purkinje fibers of the ventricle.
All these structures are His-Purkinje system.
Like all electrically excitable cells, myocardial cells have a resting potential and an action potential.
The resting potential is the difference in voltage on both sides of the membrane. Normally, it is – 90 mV.
The resting potential depends mainly on the transport of Nations through the membrane.
When heart cells are excited, there is a decrease in the value of this potential due to the influx of Nations into the cells and Ca++.
The changes in membrane potential
due to the movement of ions through the membrane are called the action
potential.
Phases of action potential?
●It is divided into 5 phases.
●During phase 0,
the Na+ ions move into the cell.
●During phase 1,
Na+ channels are closed and the K+ ions move outside the cells, thereby initiating returning of the original resting potential (repolarization); inward current of CI also contributes to this process.
●During phase 2,
the outward current of K+ ions is balanced by the simultaneous entering of positively charged Ca++ ions
(plateau phase).
This phase is not present in the cells of the cardiac conduction system
(the sinus node, the atrioventricular node, the His-Purkinje system).
●During phase 3,
the repolarization process ends,
K+ ions go out of the cell.
By the end of phase 3, the sodium channels are not able to conduct Na+ ions.
(refractory period or non-excitability period).
●The resting potential is achieved during phase 4.
The action potential can occur in a heart cell during the transfer of this potential from the other cells, or it emerges spontaneously in the cells of the sinus and atrioventricular node in the His-Purkinje system.
The latter process is called spontaneous diastolic depolarization.
It occurs in the cells of the cardiac conduction system during phase 4
, the inward currents of Na+ and
Ca++ are responsible for this process.
●The cells with the ability to spontaneous diastolic depolarization have the function of automaticity.
Properties necessary for normal heart function?
1) the excitability (the ability to respond to an electrical impulse).
2) the automaticity
(spontaneous diastolic depolarization).
3) the conductivity
(impulse propagation on the cardiac conduction system)
4) effective refractory period, the period of cellular non-excitability
(it lasts from the phase 0 to the phase 3, inclusive).
What is arrhythmia?
●Arrhythmia is the disturbance of impulse formation or its conduction
in the heart.
●All arrhythmias are divided into two groups:
bradyarrhythmias (“brady” - rare)
and
tachyarrhythmias (“tachy” - often).
●Bradyarrhythmia can be bradycardia or slowing of the impulse conduction from the atria to the ventricles (AV blockade).
Bradyarrhythmias are caused by the organic heart diseases or toxic influence of the drugs
(beta-blockers, clonidine, cardiac glycosides, calcium channel blockers, and others).
●Tachyarrhythmias arise due to the disturbances of automatism, conduction, or a combination of both.
●Tachyarrhythmias are caused by functional and organic heart diseases and intoxications.
●All tachyarrhythmias are divided
into:
a) sinus tachycardia
b) extrasystole (a premature contraction of the heart,
it is independent of the normal heart rhythm and it arises in response to an impulse in some part of the heart, different from the normal impulse
of the SA node)
c) the type of arrhythmia re-entry (excitation re-entry waves in the same place)
d) WPW syndrome
(premature ventricular stimulation).
Re-entry arrhythmias are
atrial flutter or fibrillation,
paroxysmal supra- and ventricular, tachycardia,
ventricular fibrillation.
●Ventricular tachyarrhythmias are the most dangerous as they lead to non-effective heart functioning, insufficient blood supply to the brain and, ultimately, death.
Classification of antiarrhythmic drugs?
》》They are divided into two groups according to the rhythm frequency.
1) drugs for the treatment of bradyarrhythmias.
2) drugs for the treatment of tachyarrhythmias or, in fact, true antiarrhythmic drugs.
In pharmacological manuals, the antiarrhythmics include the drugs for tachyarrhythmias treatment only.
Drugs for the treatment of bradyarrhythmias?
●They affect the autonomic innervations of the heart,
a) drugs that decrease the influence of the parasympathetic nerve system on the heart,
》》M-cholinoblockers - atropine
b) drugs that increase the influence of the sympathetic nerve system on the
heart
(through stimulation of beta-1 adrenergic receptors),
》》beta adrenergic agonists with beta-1 adrenergic activity -
isoprenaline (isoproterenol).
Drugs for the treatment of tachyarrhythmias.
●They are a very large group of substances.
》They differ in their effect on the ionic channels Na+, K+, Ca++, passing across the membrane of the heart cells.
》This drugs are divided into 4 classes (classification of Vaughan-Williams).
Class I?
●Blockers of sodium channels have a difference in effect on,
a) duration of the refractory period (subclass IA slows down,
IB shortens,
IC does not significantly change).
b) intracardiac conduction
(subclass IA decreases,
IB has no effect,
IC strongly reduces).
Subclass IA has a direct inhibitory and an indirect (atropine-like) effect on AV conduction that promotes the passage of atrial tachyarrhythmias to ventricles.
Class IA (Examples)?
》Quinidine (+|+++)
》Procainamide (+|+++)
》Disopyramide (+|+++)
Quinidine (IA) Facts?
●Quinidine is a toxic drug.
It causes hypotensive effect
(due to alpha-adrenoceptor
blocking action and inhibition of myocardial contractility),
●”cinchonism”
(ringing in the ears,
headache,
confusion,
etc.)
rarely -
idiosyncrasy and autoimmune reactions
(thrombocytopenia,
hepatitis,
angioedema,
fever)
Procainamide (IA) Facts?
●It causes hypotension
(due to the ganglionic-blocking action and
decrease of myocardial contractility)
●lupus syndrome
(arthritis,
skin rash,
etc.)
Disopyramide (IA) Facts?
● It inhibits myocardial contractility (dangerous in the presence of heart failure).
●It has the most prominent atropine-like effect among IA drugs.
Therefore it is not used for atrial arrhythmias.
Class IB (Examples)?
●Lidocaine (0|+++)
●Mexiletine(0|+++)
Lidocaine (IB) Facts?
●Lidocaine decreases the duration of the action potential in normal myocardiocytes and prolongs it in the pathological cells.
●Lidocaine is the least toxic representative of class I.
●Adverse effects are
rare and mild.
●There are neurological disorders typical of systemic effects of local anesthetics,
》paresthesia,
》tremors,
》hearing loss,
》and others
Mexiletine (IB) Facts?
●Lidocaine-like drug for oral administration.
》It is more toxic and less effective than
lidocaine.