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Vol. 288, Issue 2, 685-692, February 1999
Departments of
Anesthesiology (B.S., J.E.H., J.L.),
Physiology
(J.E.H., L.O.L.), and
Pharmacology (C.E.R.), Texas Tech University
Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, Texas;
BioMedical Consulting, Foster
City, California (M.J.W.); and
Department of Psychology, Carleton
University, Ottawa, Canada (D.C.M.)
We identified for the first time two genetically selected strains of
rats that differ markedly in sensitivity to cocaine-induced life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias and arrest. The two strains of
rats, designated as Fast and Slow, were bred for sensitivity (Fast) or
resistance (Slow) to electrically kindled seizures. Studies were
performed on halothane-anesthetized, mechanically ventilated rats.
Animals were given cocaine (3 or 4 mg/kg/min i.v.) until they died.
Arrhythmias (atrioventricular conduction block) developed at much lower
cumulative cocaine doses in Slow-kindling rats than in Fast-kindling
rats (15 ± 1 versus 42 ± 3 mg/kg, p < .01). The lethal cocaine dose (the dose that caused cardiac arrest) was
also markedly lower in Slow than in Fast strains (32 ± 2 versus
62 ± 6 mg/kg, p < .01). These differences
between the two strains were not significantly altered by pretreatment
of animals with either ganglionic blockers, hexamethonium (20 mg/kg i.v.) or chlorisondamine (5 mg/kg i.v.), or a nonselective
beta adrenergic receptor blocker, propranolol (1 mg/kg
i.v.). A nonselective alpha adrenergic receptor blocker,
phentolamine (10 mg/kg i.v.), however, abolished the differences
between the Fast and Slow strains in the doses of cocaine required to
produced atrioventricular conduction block and cardiac arrest. The
results provide the first evidence of genetically determined
susceptibility or resistance to cocaine-induced cardiotoxicity. There
appears to be a genetically determined difference in the
alpha adrenergic receptor system between the two strains
that is responsible for the differential sensitivity to cocaine-induced
arrhythmias and cardiac arrest.