对钠通道阻断药物心脏毒性的临床效果和治疗建议的重要重新考虑。

Donna L Seger
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引用次数: 26

摘要

心脏钠通道由跨越心脏细胞膜并形成通道孔的蛋白质组成。去极化导致蛋白质移动并打开钠通道。一旦通道打开(活性构象),钠离子就会进入细胞。然后通道从活性构象变为非活性构象——通道保持开放,但钠离子的流入停止。当通道从非活性构象移动到封闭构象时,恢复发生,然后准备在下一次去极化后打开。钠通道阻断药物(NCBDs)在活性构象和非活性构象中占据通道中的受体。药物在恢复过程中与大多数通道受体分离,但药物分离所需的时间减慢了恢复。恢复缓慢延长了传导时间,这是NCBD过量的主要毒性。如果心率增加,传导时间会进一步延长,因为单位时间内可用的活性构象和非活性构象更多,这增加了NCBD的通道受体结合位点。除了延长传导时间外,NCBDs还能降低肌力。NCBD心脏毒性的治疗一直基于体外和动物实验以及病例报告。现在必须重新评估基于这一证据的假设。例如,当使用三环抗抑郁药(TCAs)时,犬持续发展室性心动过速(VT)。许多讨论NCBD心脏毒性的文献假设TCA中毒在人类中诱发VT的规律与在犬中发生的规律相同。似乎,支持这一假设的发现是,远端心肌梗死患者在治疗性摄入NCBD时发生VT。然而,在缺血或已缺血的心肌中,传导延长。与正常心肌相比,NCBD更能延长先前缺血心肌的传导,从而导致传导不均匀,从而导致室速等再入性心律失常的发生。尽管在NCBD过量后,健康心脏可能出现一些不均匀传导,但没有证据表明在这种情况下,不均匀传导的发生会导致再入性心律失常。通过多种动物模型和多种NCBDs,比较了钠离子、碳酸氢盐离子和碱中毒对室性心律失常、低血压和死亡率的治疗作用。这些实验的结果已被推断为人类过量服用NCBD。动物模型和单一治疗方法可能缩小了我们的研究范围。最近的证据表明,每种NCBD的特性可能需要独特的治疗。有有限的证据表明,胰高血糖素,增加初始钠离子流入心脏细胞,应考虑在早期治疗心脏毒性。另一个考虑可能是用更快的动力学处理NCBD。如果占据受体的NCBD被更快地离开和进入受体的NCBD所取代,传导时间就会减少。这种治疗的证据较少,因为风险可能更大。随着对钠通道和NCBD的进一步了解,我们必须重新评估我们对心脏健康的NCBD过量患者的治疗方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A critical reconsideration of the clinical effects and treatment recommendations for sodium channel blocking drug cardiotoxicity.

The cardiac sodium channel is comprised of proteins that span the cardiac cell membrane and form the channel pore. Depolarisation causes the proteins to move and open the sodium channel. Once the channel is open (active conformation), sodium ions move into the cell. The channel then changes from the active conformation to an inactive conformation - the channel remains open, but influx of sodium ions ceases. Recovery occurs as the channel moves from the inactive conformation back to the closed conformation and is then ready to open following the next depolarisation. Sodium channel blocking drugs (NCBDs) occupy receptors in the channel during the active and inactive conformations. The drug dissociates from most of the channel receptors during recovery, but the time it takes the drug to dissociate slows recovery. The slowed recovery prolongs conduction time, the main toxicity of NCBD overdose. Conduction time is further prolonged if heart rate increases as there are more available active and inactive conformations/unit time, which increases channel receptor binding sites for the NCBD. In addition to prolonging conduction time, NCBDs also decrease inotropy. Treatment of NCBD cardiotoxicity has been based on in vitro and animal experiments, and case reports. Assumptions based on this evidence must now be reassessed. For example, canines consistently develop ventricular tachycardia (VT) when tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) are administered. Much of the literature discussing NCBD cardiotoxicity assumes that TCA poisoning induces VT in humans with the same regularity that occurs in canines. Seemingly, in support of this assumption was the finding that patients with remote myocardial infarction developed VT when therapeutically ingesting a NCBD. However, conduction is prolonged in myocardium that is or has been ischaemic. NCBD prolong conduction more in previously ischaemic myocardium than in normal myocardium, which causes nonuniform conduction and allows the development of re-entrant arrhythmias such as VT. Although some nonuniform conduction may occur in the healthy heart following a NCBD overdose, there is no evidence that nonuniform conduction occurs to the extent that it will cause re-entrant arrhythmias in this setting. Using various animal models and a variety of NCBDs, sodium ions, bicarbonate ions and alkalosis have been compared for the treatment of ventricular arrhythmias, hypotension and mortality. The results of these experiments have been extrapolated to NCBD overdose in humans. Animal models and single treatment approaches may have narrowed our scope. More recent evidence indicates that properties of each individual NCBD may require unique treatment. There is limited evidence that glucagon, which increases initial sodium ion influx into the cardiac cell, should be considered early in the treatment of cardiotoxicity. Another consideration may be treatment of NCBD with faster kinetics. Conduction time is decreased if a NCBD occupying the receptor is replaced by a NCBD that moves off and on the receptor more quickly. There is less evidence for this treatment, as risk may be greater. With greater understanding of the sodium channel and NCBDs, we must reassess our approach to the treatment of patients with healthy hearts who overdose on NCBD.

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