GYKI-23 107 is a new antiarrhythmic substance with local anaesthetic activity. Its specific pharmacological and cardiovascular effects were studied in vivo and its efficacy was compared with that of lidocaine and mexiletine. GYKI-23 107 was effective against chemically (aconitine and ouabain) induced arrhythmias after both parenteral and oral administration. In aconitine-induced arrhythmia in mice the new compound was more active than either mexiletine or lidocaine after i.p. treatment. In ouabain-induced arrhythmia in dogs, the ED50 of GYKI-23 107 was approximately half that of mexiletine after i.v. injection. GYKI-23 107 and mexiletine produced similar elevation of the fibrillation threshold in anaesthetized cats. After oral pretreatment, GYKI-23 107 showed protective effects against coronary ligation-induced arrhythmia in conscious rats. The circulatory side-effects of GYKI-23 107 in anaesthetized and conscious dogs and cats were milder then those of mexiletine. In the antiarrhythmic dose range there were no adverse cardiovascular actions.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

gyki-23 107
28
gyki-23
7
0
7
mexiletine
5
pharmacological investigation
4
investigation anti-arrhythmic
4
anti-arrhythmic agent
4
agent gyki-23
4
107 gyki-23
4
107 antiarrhythmic
4

Similar Publications

The cellular cardiac electrophysiological effects of GYKI-23 107 (1-/2,6-dimethylamino/-2-dimethylaminopropane dihydrochloride), a new investigational antiarrhythmic drug, were studied in rabbit and canine ventricular muscle and Purkinje fibers. For comparison, mexiletine was used. GYKI-23 107, like mexiletine, did not affect the resting membrane potential and slightly reduced the action potential amplitude in both fiber types.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

GYKI-23 107 is a new antiarrhythmic substance with local anaesthetic activity. Its specific pharmacological and cardiovascular effects were studied in vivo and its efficacy was compared with that of lidocaine and mexiletine. GYKI-23 107 was effective against chemically (aconitine and ouabain) induced arrhythmias after both parenteral and oral administration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!