A course of treatment (16 mg/kg orally during 5 days) by Aralia mandshurica or Rhodiola rosea extracts reduced the incidence of ischemic and reperfusion ventricular arrhythmias during 10-min ischemia and 10-min reperfusion. Extracts of Eleutherococcus senticosus, Leuzea carthamoides, and Panax ginseng did not change the incidence of ischemic and reperfusion arrhythmias. Chronic treatment by aralia, rhodiola, and eleutherococcus elevated the ventricular fibrillation threshold in rats with postinfarction cardiosclerosis. Ginseng and leuzea did not change this parameter in rats with postinfarction cardiosclerosis.
Preliminary selective blockade of µ , δ 1 , δ 2 , κ 1 , and κ 2 opioid receptors proved to have no effect on the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias during a 10-min coronary occlusion and subsequent reperfusion in ketamine-anesthetized rats. We propose that the endogenous opioid system has no considerable role in regulation of heart resistance to the arrhythmogenic effect of short-term local ischemia and subsequent reperfusion.
Preliminary selective block of mu-, delta1-, delta2-, and kappa-opioid receptors had no effect on the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias during 10-min coronary occlusion-reperfusion in ketamine-narcotized rats. Repetitive short-term immobilization of rats for 2 weeks improved heart resistance to the arrhythmogenic action of coronary occlusion and reperfusion. Selective mu-opioid receptor antagonist CTAP completely abolished, while selective delta- and kappa-opioid receptor antagonists did not modulate the antiarrhythmic effect of adaptation. Probably, endogenous agonists of mu-opioid receptors play an important role in the adaptive improvement of heart resistance to arrhythmogenic factors, but are insignificant for the modulation of heart resistance to the arrhythmogenic action of short-term local ischemia-reperfusion in non-adapted animals.
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