RESUMO
The cardiac electrophysiologic and antiarrhythmic actions of 3,4-dihydro-1'-[2-(benzofurazan-5-yl)ethyl]-6-methyl-sulfonamid ospiro [(2H)-1-benzopyran-2,4'-piperidin]-4-one HCl (L-691,121), a novel spirobenzopyran piperidine class III agent, were assessed in vitro and in vivo. In ferret isolated papillary muscles, L-691,121 significantly prolonged effective refractory period (EC25 = 13 nM) and elicited a modest positive inotropic effect. In guinea pig isolated ventricular myocytes, L-691,121 prolonged action potential duration by selectively blocking (IC50 = 4.4 nM) a rapidly activating and rectifying component of the delayed rectifier K+ current, Ikr. The class III activity of L-691,121 in isolated papillary muscles was reverse frequency-dependent, and reversed by hypoxic perfusion. L-691,121 modestly depressed spontaneous beating rate (-14%) in guinea pig isolated right atria at concentrations up to 3 microM. In anesthetized dogs, the i.v. administration of 10 to 100 micrograms/kg of L-691,121 significantly increased atrial and ventricular refractoriness and prolonged the electrocardiographic Q-T interval, but did not alter atrioventricular nodal, His-Purkinje, atrial or ventricular conduction. In conscious dogs with spontaneous premature ventricular complexes at 48 hr after myocardial infarction, 10 to 1000 micrograms/kg i.v. of L-691, 121 failed to reduce premature ventricular complex frequency. However, in anesthetized dogs studied chronically (7.9 +/- 0.3 days) after infarction, 10 and 100 micrograms/kg i.v. of L-691,121 suppressed the induction of ventricular tachyarrhythmia by programmed stimulation in 8/14 (57%) and 11/14 (79%) dogs tested, respectively, and reduced the incidence of lethal ventricular arrhythmias triggered by a secondary myocardial ischemic event from 14/15 (93%) in vehicle controls to 5/14 (36%; P < .01) in L-691,121-treated (100 micrograms/kg i.v.) animals. The latter findings suggest the potential for L-691,121 to prevent the development of malignant ventricular arrhythmias in the setting of previous myocardial infarction.