The inhibitory effect of the phenylalkylamine-type Ca2+-entry blocker, tiapamil, on the fast Na+ inward current was investigated in guinea-pig papillary muscles by measuring the maximum upstroke velocity (dV/dt)max of transmembrane action potentials. Tiapamil inhibited (dV/dt)max at concentrations above 10(-6) M, with an IC50 value of 7 X 10(-5) M (1 Hz stimulation frequency, 5.9 mM extracellular K+). Verapamil was less potent in depressing upstroke velocity. Inhibition of the dV/dtmax strongly depended on the frequency at which the muscles were stimulated ("use-dependent" effect). There was no evidence that tiapamil acts in a potential-dependent manner like local anesthetics. The results indicate that the Ca2+-entry blocker tiapamil has additional pharmacological properties, which may contribute to its usefulness in the treatment of ventricular arrhythmias.
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