The results suggest that it would be unlikely for second-generation antipsychotics to raise the risk of major malformations more than 10-fold beyond that observed in the general population or among control groups using other psychotropic medications. If the estimate stabilizes around the null with ongoing data collection, findings may be reassuring for both clinicians and women trying to make risk-benefit treatment decisions about using atypical antipsychotics during pregnancy. These findings are timely given the renewed focus of regulatory agencies on reproductive safety.
Background
The border zone of healing myocardial infarcts is an arrhythmogenic substrate partly due to structural and functional remodeling of the ventricular gap junction protein, Connexin43 (Cx43). Cx43 in arrhythmogenic substrates is a potential target for antiarrhythmic therapy.
Methods and Results
We characterized Cx43 remodeling in the epicardial border zone (EBZ) of healing canine infarcts, 5 days after coronary occlusion and examined whether the gap junction specific agent, Rotigaptide, could reverse it. Cx43 remodeling in the EBZ was characterized by a decrease in Cx43 protein, lateralization and increased Cx43 phosphorylation at serine (S) 368. Rotigaptide partially reversed the loss of Cx43 but did not affect the increase in S368 phosphorylation nor did it reverse Cx43 lateralization. Rotigaptide did not prevent conduction slowing in EBZ nor did it decrease the induction of sustained ventricular tachycardia (SMVT) by programmed stimulation, although it did decrease the EBZ effective refractory period (ERP).
Conclusions
We conclude that partial reversal of Cx43 remodeling in healing infarct border zone may not be sufficient to restore normal conduction or prevent arrhythmias.
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