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Myocardial metabolism for the toxicologist.
Author(s) -
Robert G. Merin
Publication year - 1978
Publication title -
environmental health perspectives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.257
H-Index - 282
eISSN - 1552-9924
pISSN - 0091-6765
DOI - 10.1289/ehp.7826169
Subject(s) - intracellular , calcium , energy metabolism , cardiac muscle , calcium in biology , mechanism (biology) , chemistry , pharmacology , biophysics , metabolism , drug , biochemistry , biology , medicine , philosophy , organic chemistry , epistemology
Drug effects on myocardial contractile function are obviously of considerable practical importance for the toxicologist. The basic mechanism of such actions must reside at some point in the metabolism of cardiac muscle. Interference in the liberation of energy from the fuels that the heart uses may be implicated. It is possible that drugs may interfere with the storage (conservation) of that energy as the high energy phosphates (ATP and CP). Finally, the utilization of that stored energy by the contractile proteins themselves may be altered. The latter process is highly dependent on intracellular calcium ion kinetics. Anesthetic drugs, which produce reversible depression of myocardial contractile function is a dose-dependent fashion, have been shown to interfere to some extent with all three processes. However, the most important mechanism probably involves utilization of energy and intracellular calcium ion movement. A basic knowledge of the biochemistry of cardiac muscle is necessary for the understanding of drug action and toxicity at the subcellular level.

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