Lidocaine Block of Sodium Channels in Heart Cells

Author(s):  
Bruce P. Bean ◽  
Charles J. Cohen ◽  
Rosemarie C. Tan ◽  
Richard W. Tsien
Keyword(s):  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis Paul ◽  
Harry J. Gould III

Sodium channels play a pivotal role in maintaining homeostasis and proper intracellular ion concentrations that are vital to all living cells for function and survival. In excitable tissues such as neurons and heart cells, sodium channels are responsible for establishing and maintaining the transmembrane electrochemical gradient, which is critical for intercellular communication and for the transduction, generation, modulation, and transmission of impulses that underlie normal physiologic function, the perception of stimuli, and the execution of appropriate behavioral responses. Injury and disease often affect changes in the channel density and subtype distribution present in cellular membranes, thereby upsetting the critical electrochemical balance necessary for normal functioning. When such changes affect the systems that process noxious stimulation and are acute and transient, they are beneficial. The pain that is perceived alerts us to current or impending injury and aids in vigilance during wound healing. But when the changes are persistent, the painful signals are no longer protective but, instead, become unrelenting and destructive to the quality of life. Because changes in sodium channel quantity and distribution play such a central role in the perception of pain and the development and maintenance of nociceptive chronicity, significant effort has been expended on discovering ways to affect sodium channel expression and function that might be effective in preventing or managing many painful conditions. The implications of modifying sodium channel expression and function for future therapeutic benefit are the subject of this review. Key Words: Acute pain, chronic pain, sodium channels


Author(s):  
B. Craig ◽  
L. Hawkey ◽  
A. LeFurgey

Ultra-rapid freezing followed by cryoultramicrotomy is essential for the preservation of diffusible elements in situ within cells prior to scanning transmission electron microscopy and quantitative energy dispersive x-ray microanalysis. For cells or tissue fragments in suspension and for monolayer cell cultures, propane jet freezing provides cooling rates greater than 30,000°C/sec with regions up to 40μm in thickness free of significant ice crystal formation. While this method of freezing has frequently been applied prior to freeze fracture or freeze substitution, it has not been widely utilized prior to cryoultramicrotomy and subsequent x-ray microanalytical studies. This report describes methods devised in our laboratory for cryosectioning of propane jet frozen kidney proximal tubule suspensions and cultured embryonic chick heart cells, in particular a new technique for mounting frozen suspension specimens for sectioning. The techniques utilize the same specimen supports and sample holders as those used for freeze fracture and freeze substitution and should be generally applicable to any cell suspension or culture preparation.


Author(s):  
W.G. Wier

A fundamentally new understanding of cardiac excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling is being developed from recent experimental work using confocal microscopy of single isolated heart cells. In particular, the transient change in intracellular free calcium ion concentration ([Ca2+]i transient) that activates muscle contraction is now viewed as resulting from the spatial and temporal summation of small (∼ 8 μm3), subcellular, stereotyped ‘local [Ca2+]i-transients' or, as they have been called, ‘calcium sparks'. This new understanding may be called ‘local control of E-C coupling'. The relevance to normal heart cell function of ‘local control, theory and the recent confocal data on spontaneous Ca2+ ‘sparks', and on electrically evoked local [Ca2+]i-transients has been unknown however, because the previous studies were all conducted on slack, internally perfused, single, enzymatically dissociated cardiac cells, at room temperature, usually with Cs+ replacing K+, and often in the presence of Ca2-channel blockers. The present work was undertaken to establish whether or not the concepts derived from these studies are in fact relevant to normal cardiac tissue under physiological conditions, by attempting to record local [Ca2+]i-transients, sparks (and Ca2+ waves) in intact, multi-cellular cardiac tissue.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. S190-S190
Author(s):  
Eugene Golanov ◽  
Heather Drummond ◽  
Jasleen Shant ◽  
Benjamin Clower ◽  
Betty Chen

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document