This double-blind, four-way crossover study assessed the effect of valdecoxib on the QTc interval duration in 25 male and 9 female healthy adults. Subjects received placebo or 40 mg, 80 mg, or 120 mg valdecoxib once daily for 5 days. Serial ECGs were obtained for 24 hours before the first treatment (baseline) and on the 5th day of each treatment. The study was statistically powered to detect a difference of > or = 5.6 ms in the average daily QTc change from baseline and a > or = 7.8-ms difference in the average maximal daily change from baseline. No QTc prolongation versus placebo (Fridericia's or Bazett's correction) was observed for any valdecoxib dose. A 22% greater than proportional increase in valdecoxib AUC0-24 was observed over the 40- to 120-mg dose range, supporting the conclusiveness of the negative QTc risk assessment even at supratherapeutic doses (up to three times the maximum recommended dose of 40 mg per day) and concentrations. In conclusion, repeated administration of doses up to 120 mg valdecoxib had no effect on cardiac repolarization in healthy volunteers, suggesting that chronic administration of valdecoxib to patients would not increase the risk from cardiac arrhythmia associated with QT prolongation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0091270003257220 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
December 2024
Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, USA.
Background -Smoking is associated with arrhythmia and sudden cardiac death, but the biological mechanisms remain unclear. In electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings abnormal durations of ventricular repolarization (QT interval), atrial depolarization (P wave), and atrioventricular depolarization (PR interval and segment), predict cardiac arrhythmia and mortality. Previous analyses of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) database for associations between smoking and ECG abnormalities were incomplete.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Heart Assoc
December 2024
Graduate Program in Translational Biology Medicine and Health, Virginia Tech Roanoke VA USA.
Background: Previous studies suggest the relationship between activation time (AT) and action potential duration (APD) in the heart is dependent on electrotonic coupling, but this has not been directly tested. This study assessed whether acute changes in electrical coupling, or other determinants of conduction or repolarization, modulate APD heterogeneity.
Methods And Results: Langendorff-perfused guinea pig hearts were epicardially paced and optically mapped after treatment with the gap junction uncoupler carbenoxolone, ephaptic uncoupler mannitol, ephaptic enhancer dextran 2MDa, sodium channel inhibitor flecainide, or rapid component of the delayed rectifier potassium channel inhibitor E4031.
Background: Flecainide and other class-Ic antiarrhythmic drugs (AADs) are widely used in Andersen-Tawil syndrome type 1 (ATS1) patients. However, class-Ic drugs might be proarrhythmic in some cases. We investigated the molecular mechanisms of class-I AADs proarrhythmia and whether they might increase the risk of death in ATS1 patients with structurally normal hearts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Methods Programs Biomed
December 2024
Centro de Investigación e Innovación en Bioingeniería (Ci2B), Universitat Politècnica de València, Valencia, Spain. Electronic address:
Background And Objective: In silico human models are being used more and more to predict the potential proarrhythmic risk of compounds. It has been shown that incorporation of the dynamics of drug-hERG channel interactions can have an important impact on the action potential duration (APD) at normal heart rates. Our aim is to investigate the relevance of drug dynamics on other important biomarkers of proarrhythmic risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Biol
December 2024
Division of Integrative Physiology, Department of Physiology, Jichi Medical University, 3311-1 Yakushiji, Shimotsuke, Tochigi, 329-0498, Japan.
The KCNE family (KCNE1-5) is a group of single transmembrane auxiliary subunits for the voltage-gated K channel KCNQ1. The KCNQ1-KCNE complexes are crucial for numerous physiological processes including ventricular repolarization and K recycling in epithelial cells. We identified a new member of the KCNE family, "KCNE6", from zebrafish.
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