Abstract
Chronotropic and inotropic actions of phencyclidine were studied in spontaneously beating right atrial muscle and electrically paced left atrial muscle preparations isolated from guinea-pig or rat hearts. In right atrial muscle preparations, phencyclidine (10-100 microM) decreased the frequency of spontaneous beating. Guinea-pig and rat heart preparations had similar sensitivities to this action of phencyclidine. The negative chronotropic effect was not altered by atropine. A high concentration of naloxone failed to affect the chronotropic effect of phencyclidine in guinea-pig muscle, but significantly reduced the effect in rat heart muscle preparations. Phencyclidine (1-100 microM) caused positive inotropic effects in both guinea-pig and rat heart left atrial muscle electrically stimulated at 1.5 Hz; rat heart preparations had a higher sensitivity to the positive inotropic action of phencyclidine. The positive inotropic effect was reduced by verapamil, nifedipine and relatively high concentrations of diltiazem, but was not affected by propranolol, phentolamine, tripelennamine, atropine or ryanodine, indicating that the effect is not mediated by adrenergic, histaminergic or cholinergic systems or does not involve ryanodine-sensitive calcium pools. Inactivation of the fast sodium channels by partial membrane depolarization, and subsequent restoration of the contraction by raising the extracellular Ca++ concentration, did not abolish the positive inotropic action of phencyclidine. These results suggest that the negative chronotropic effect of phencyclidine is not mediated by a stimulation of the muscarinic receptor. The positive inotropic effects of phencyclidine seem to result from an increase in Ca++ influx through the slow channels of the cardiac cell membrane.
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