Frequency-dependence of the slow force response

2008 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Frequency-dependence of the slow force response​
Lewinski, D. von; Zhu, D.; Khafaga, M.; Kockskamper, J.; Maier, L. S. ; Hasenfuss, G.   & Pieske, B. ​ (2008) 
Frontiers in Bioscience13 pp. 7202​-7209​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.2741/3222 

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Authors
Lewinski, Dirk von; Zhu, Danan; Khafaga, Mounir; Kockskamper, Jens; Maier, Lars S. ; Hasenfuss, Gerd ; Pieske, Burkert 
Abstract
Stretch induces biphasic inotropic effects in mammalian myocardium. A delayed component (slow force response, SFR) has been demonstrated in various species, however, experimental conditions varied and the underlying mechanisms are controversial. The physiological relevance of the SFR is poorly understood. Experiments were performed in ventricular muscle strips from failing human hearts and non-failing rabbit hearts. Upon stretch, twitch force was assessed at basal conditions (1Hz, 37 C) and after changing stimulation frequency with and without blockade of the Na(+)/H(+)-exchanger-1 (NHE1) or reverse-mode Na+/Ca+-exchange (NCX). Action potential duration (APD) was assessed using floating electrodes. Low stimulation rates (0.2Hz) potentiated and higher stimulation rates (2 and 3Hz) reduced the SFR. The extent of SFR inhibition by NHE1 or NCX inhibition was not affected by stimulation rate. APD decreased at 0.2Hz but was not altered at higher stimulation rates. The data demonstrate frequency-dependence of the SFR with greater positive inotropic effects at lower stimulation rates. Subcellular mechanisms underlying the SFR are not fundamentally affected by stimulation rate. The SFR may have more pronounced physiological effects at lower heart rates.
Issue Date
2008
Journal
Frontiers in Bioscience 
ISSN
1093-9946
Language
English

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