Does high extracellular magnesium suppress arrhythmias by acting as a calcium antagonist or increasing outward potassium currents in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes?
High extracellular magnesium suppresses cardiac arrhythmias by decreasing oscillatory potential amplitude and screening external sarcolemmal charges, rather than by blocking calcium currents or increasing potassium currents.
The hypotheses that magnesium quickly abolishes arrhythmias by acting as a calcium antagonist or by increasing outward potassium currents were tested in guinea-pig isolated ventricular myocytes by recording membrane potentials and currents by means of a single microelectrode discontinuous voltage clamp method. 2. High Mg2+o (4-16 mmol/L) slightly increased the amplitude and duration of the action potential (AP) in some myocytes, but overall the changes were not significant. 3. High Mg2+o did not decrease the slow inward current (ICa) and had little effect on voltage- and time-dependent outward potassium currents whether or not ICa was allowed to flow. 4. Zero Mg2+o decreased the duration, but not amplitude, of the AP. Zero Mg2+o had little effect on ICa and on outward currents except for a small increase in outward current in the region of the negative slope of the inward rectifier current-voltage relationship. 5. In our myocytes, in contrast to Mg2+o, high Ca2+o significantly increased the amplitude and decreased the duration of the AP; at the same time, high Ca2+o increases ICa and the outward potassium current. 6. High Mg2+o decreased the amplitude of the oscillatory potentials (Vos)induced by various Ca(2+)-overloading procedures (high Ca2+o, noradrenaline, strophanthidin and barium). 7. It is concluded that the mechanisms by which high Mg2+o quickly suppresses cardiac arrhythmias are related to an extracellular action of Mg2+ and do not include a block of ICa or an increase in outward current. Mg2+ can be antiarrhythmic by decreasing Vos amplitude and possibly by screening the fixed negative charges at the external surface of the sarcolemma.
Song et al. (Sun,) studied this question.