Basis and Treatment of Cardiac Arrhythmias incorporates the most up-to date information related to mechanisms and treatment of cardiac arrhythmia.
Many of the topics discussed in this text reflect very recently undertaken research directions including:
- genetics of arrhythmias
- cell signalling molecules as potential therapeutic targets
- trafficking to the membrane
These new approaches and implementations of anti-arrhythmic therapy derive from many decades of research. The text covers changes in approaches to therapy over time, arrhythmias in multiple cardiac regions and over many scales, from gene to protein to cell to tissue to organ.
Contents
- History of Arrhythmias
- Pacemaker Current and Automatic Rhythms:
Toward a Molecular Understanding
- Proarrhythmia
- Cardiac Na+ Channels as Therapeutic Targets
for Antiarrhythmic Agents
- Structural Determinants of Potassium Channel Blockade
and Drug-Induced Arrhythmias
- Sodium Calcium Exchange as a Target for Antiarrhythmic Therapy
- A Role for Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II
in Cardiac Disease and Arrhythmia
- AKAPs as Antiarrhythmic Targets?
- β-Blockers as Antiarrhythmic Agents
- Experimental Therapy of Genetic Arrhythmias:
Disease-Specific Pharmacology
- Mutation-Specific Pharmacology of the Long QT Syndrome
- Therapy for the Brugada Syndrome
- Molecular Basis of Isolated Cardiac Conduction Disease
- hERG Trafficking and Pharmacological Rescue
of LQTS-2 Mutant Channels
Index