Editorials |
From the Department of Pharmacology, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY.
Correspondence to José Jalife, MD, Department of Pharmacology, SUNY Upstate Medical University, 766 Irving Ave, Syracuse, NY 13210. E-mail jalifej@upstate.edu
Key Words: mechanical forces pulsatile stress cell-to-cell communication conduction velocity optical mapping immunohistochemistry
| Introduction |
|---|
The process of filling and ejecting blood subjects the cells of the
heart to repetitive pulsatile stress. Our understanding of the basic
electrophysiology underlying the cardiac action potential and its
propagation across cells is largely on the basis of patch clamp data
and isolated tissue experiments in the absence of mechanical stress. On
the other hand, whole-heart
electrophysiological mapping studies are
often carried out in in situ functioning hearts. In either case, the
role of mechanical stress in impulse initiation and propagation has not
been adequately addressed. In addition, although stretch is thought to
play an important role in cardiac
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