pubmed-article:1579041 | pubmed:abstractText | The cardiac vagolytic effects of disopyramide and its mono-N-dealkylated metabolite (MND), and their interactions with the cardiac cholinergic system, were assessed using in vivo and in vitro experiments. In chloralose anesthetized dogs, disopyramide phosphate (0.25 mg/kg/min) and MND at equimolar dose (0.173 mg/kg/min) reduced vagal bradycardia. As indicated by the ED80, MND exhibits a vagolytic activity 1.5-2 times less potent than disopyramide. Concomitantly, increases in heart rate and mean blood pressure were observed with disopyramide, whereas with MND only a rise in mean blood pressure occurred. In conscious dogs, where vagal tone is fully expressed, disopyramide and MND increased heart rate and, interestingly, prevented any atropine-induced additional tachycardia, though heart rate was relatively low. Binding studies on rat heart membranes yielded Ki values 2-2.5 times higher for MND than for disopyramide, and demonstrated that neither disopyramide nor MND binding modified the cardiac muscarinic receptor sites. Taken together, these results show that disopyramide exhibits a more potent cardiac vagolytic action than MND, very likely linked to a greater ability to bind to cardiac muscarinic receptors. They also show that disopyramide and MND are very potent in preventing atropine-induced "excess tachycardia", very likely by inhibiting the ionic pacemaker current(s) involved in its genesis. | lld:pubmed |