Naar homepage     
Chronische Cerebro-Spinale Veneuze Insufficiëntie
Aanmelden op het CCSVI.nl forum
Lees Voor (ReadSpeaker)    A-   A+
Over CCSVI.nl | Zoeken | Contact | Forum
CCSVI.nl is onderdeel van de
Franz Schelling Website
meer informatie
  
Wednesday, December 9, 2015 2:18 AM | Venöse Multiple Sklerose, CVI & SVI, CCSVI Volg link
Do you struggling with Arrhythmias, Dysrhythmia, Irregular Heartbeat & being (mis-)diagnosed with M$ at the same time? Perhaps the paper below is a good read/eye opener for you to learn how *f.. up the med. e$tablisment really is.

==================================================

Decreased Sodium and Increased Transient Outward Potassium Currents in Iron-Loaded Cardiac Myocytes
Implications for the Arrhythmogenesis of Human Siderotic Heart Disease

Abstract
Background—Patients with chronic iron overload may develop a cardiomyopathy manifested by ventricular arrhythmias and heart failure. We hypothesized that iron-loaded cardiomyocytes may have abnormal excitability.

Methods and Results—We examined a new model of human iron overload, the Mongolian gerbil given repeated injections of iron dextran. In ventricular myocytes, we measured iron concentration and distribution, action potential, sodium and potassium currents, and sodium channel protein. We showed for the first time that (1) the iron content of gerbil ventricular cardiomyocytes was increased to amounts similar to those of patients with iron-induced cardiomyopathy; (2) the overshoot and duration of the cardiac action potential decreased; (3) sodium current was reduced, steady-state inactivation was enhanced, and single-channel currents were unchanged; and (4) transient outward potassium current was increased, but inwardly rectifying potassium current was unchanged. Neonatal rat cardiomyocytes incubated with iron for 1 to 3 days showed similar changes, and levels of cardiac sodium channel proteins were unchanged.

Conclusions—Abnormal excitability and heterogeneous cardiac iron deposition may cause the arrhythmogenesis of human siderotic heart disease.
source/full paper: http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/100/6/675.full
Timeline Photos