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Pro-arrhythmic effects of low plasma [K+] in human ventricle: An illustrated review

Journal

TRENDS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 233-242

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tcm.2017.11.002

Keywords

Plasma K+; [K+](o); K+ currents; Inward rectification; Repolarization; Arrhythmias; Early after-depolarizations (EADs); Mathematical simulations; Drug safety evaluations; (CiPA)

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia, Industria y Competitividad of Spain [DPI2016-75799-R]
  2. AEI/FEDER, UE
  3. Programa Prometeu de la Conselleria d'Educacio, Formacio I Ocupacio, Generalitat Valenciana [PROMETEU/2016/088]
  4. GileadSciences, Ltd.
  5. Alberta Innovates-Health Solutions
  6. Canadian Institutes for Health Research
  7. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Alberta

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Potassium levels in the plasma, [K+](o), are regulated precisely under physiological conditions. However, increases (from approx. 4.5 to 8.0 mM) can occur as a consequence of, e.g., endurance exercise, ischemic insult or kidney failure. This hyperkalemic modulation of ventricular electrophysiology has been studied extensively. Hypokalemia is also common. It can occur in response to diuretic therapy, following renal dialysis, or during recovery from endurance exercise. In the human ventricle, clinical hypokalemia (e.g., [K+](o), levels of approx. 3.0 mM) can cause marked changes in both the resting potential and the action potential waveform, and these may promote arrhythmias. Here, we provide essential background information concerning the main K+-sensitive ion channel mechanisms that act in concert to produce prominent short-term ventricular electrophysiological changes, and illustrate these by implementing recent mathematical models of the human ventricular action potential. Even small changes (-1 mM) in [K+](o) result in significant alterations in two different K+ currents, I-K1 and HERG. These changes can markedly alter in resting membrane potential and/or action potential waveform in human ventricle. Specifically, a reduction in net outward transmembrane K+ currents (repolarization reserve) and an increased substrate input resistance contribute to electrophysiological instability during the plateau of the action potential and may promote pro-arrhythmic early after-depolarizations (EADs). Translational settings where these insights apply include: optimal diuretic therapy, and the interpretation of data from Phase II and III trials for anti -arrhythmic drug candidates.

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