Background

The noble gas xenon (Xe) has been used as an inhalational anesthetic agent in clinical trials with little or no physiologic side effects. Like nitrous oxide, Xe is believed to exert minimal unwanted cardiovascular effects, and like nitrous oxide, the vapor concentration to achieve 1 minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) for Xe in humans is high, i.e., 70-80%. In the current study, concentrations of up to 80% Xe were examined for possible myocardial effects in isolated, erythrocyte-perfused guinea pig hearts and for possible effects on altering major cation currents in isolated guinea pig cardiomyocytes.

Methods

Isolated guinea pigs hearts were perfused at 70 mm Hg via the Langendorff technique initially with a salt solution at 37 degrees C. Hearts were then perfused with fresh filtered (40-microm pore) and washed canine erythrocytes diluted in the salt solution equilibrated with 20% O2 in nitrogen (control), with 20% O2, 40% Xe, and 40% N2, (0.5 MAC), or with 20% O2 and 80% Xe (1 MAC), respectively. Hearts were perfused with 80% Xe for 15 min, and bradykinin was injected into the blood perfusate to test endothelium-dependent vasodilatory responses. Using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique, 80% Xe was tested for effects on the cardiac ion currents, the Na+, the L-type Ca2+, and the inward-rectifier K+ channel, in guinea pig myocytes suffused with a salt solution equilibrated with the same combinations of Xe, oxygen, and nitrogen as above.

Results

In isolated hearts, heart rate, atrioventricular conduction time, left ventricular pressure, coronary flow, oxygen extraction, oxygen consumption, cardiac efficiency, and flow responses to bradykinin were not significantly (repeated measures analysis of variance, P>0.05) altered by 40% or 80% Xe compared with controls. In isolated cardiomyocytes, the amplitudes of the Na+, the L-type Ca2+, and the inward-rectifier K+ channel over a range of voltages also were not altered by 80% Xe compared with controls.

Conclusions

Unlike hydrocarbon-based gaseous anesthetics, Xe does not significantly alter any measured electrical, mechanical, or metabolic factors, or the nitric oxide-dependent flow response in isolated hearts, at least partly because Xe does not alter the major cation currents as shown here for cardiac myocytes. The authors' results indicate that Xe, at approximately 1 MAC for humans, has no physiologically important effects on the guinea pig heart.

INERT noble gases are long recognized to have anesthetic properties. Inhalation of compressed air during diving was found to cause formation of nitrogen gas emboli in body spaces on ascent to the surface to a degree that pain and death could result. Substitution of inert gases, such as argon, for nitrogen greatly reduced the incidence of the “bends.”1Interestingly, it was discovered that inert-gas substitution caused divers to become nauseous and drowsy on return to the surface; thus, it was suspected that inert gases might have anesthetic properties. This was later confirmed, and xenon (Xe) was found to have the most potent anesthetic capability of the inert gases. 2–4 

Xenon has recently attracted renewed interest because it possesses many of the characteristics of an ideal anesthetic. 5Its minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) is 71% in humans, 2–4,6indicating that it is a moderately more potent anesthetic than is nitrous oxide (N2O; MAC = 104%). As an inert gas, Xe is odorless, nonexplosive, nonpungent, and does not form covalent bonds except under extreme conditions. Furthermore, unlike other general anesthetics, it is environmentally friendly because it is prepared by fractional distillation of atmospheric air, usually as a byproduct of steel-making in blast furnaces.

Xenon has successfully been used as an anesthetic in clinical trials. 7–12Its very low blood:gas partition coefficient of 0.14 allows precise corrections of anesthetic depth and a rapid induction and emergence. 6Improved scavenging and recycling techniques 9,13for Xe now permit its use in clinical anesthesia. Xe is believed to lack the occupational and environmental hazards attributed to N2O and hydrocarbon-based volatile anesthetics. 2–4 

Although nonpolar, Xe preferentially interacts with the amphiphilic head region of the lipid membrane. 14This suggests that Xe could exert cellular effects by a weak interaction with other molecules. One aim was to investigate if Xe has any depressant or stimulatory myocardial effects when given at clinically relevant concentrations in the isolated, erythrocyte-perfused guinea pig heart preparation. Because cationic fluxes in cardiac myocytes are largely responsible for cardiac function, the other aim was to investigate the effects of Xe on the major cation currents, the Na+(INa), the L-type Ca2+(ICa,L), or the inward-rectifier K+(IKir) channel. This is the first study to examine directly the effects of Xe on cardiac function and on the major cation currents that are responsible for maintaining the cardiac action potential.

Langendorff Heart Preparation

The investigation conformed to the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals  published by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH publication no. 85-23, revised 1996). After approval was obtained from the institutional animal studies committee at the Medical College of Wisconsin, 25 mg ketamine and 1,000 U heparin were injected intraperitoneally into 16 albino English short-haired guinea pigs (250–300 g). The description of the surgical preparation for this model has been reported in detail previously. 15–18Each heart was perfused in retrograde fashion through the aorta at 70 mmHg with cold, oxygenated, modified Krebs-Ringer’s solution (CaCl21.25 mM) as described previously. Isovolumetric left ventricular (LV) pressure, coronary flow, and spontaneous heart rate were measured continuously as described previously. 15–18 

Coronary sinus effluent was collected by placing a small, gas-impermeable cannula into the right ventricle through the pulmonary artery after ligating the superior and inferior venae cavae. Coronary outflow (coronary sinus) oxygen tension and p  H were measured continuously on-line with a miniature thermostabile Clark oxygen electrode (Model 203B; Instech Laboratories, Plymouth Meeting, PA) and temperature-compensated p  H electrode (microcomputer pro-vision p  H meter, model 05669-20, p  H electrode PHE 2121; Cole Palmer Instruments, Vernon Hills, IL). Perfusate, bath, and the oxygen electrode temperatures were maintained precisely at 37.2 ± 0.1°C using a thermostatically controlled water circulator via  jacketted glass tubing, bath, and aluminum heat exchangers. Coronary inflow and effluent p  H and oxygen and carbon dioxide tensions were measured off-line at 37°C with an intermittently self-calibrating analyzer system (Radiometer ABL-2; Medtron Chicago, Inc., Des Plaines, IL).

Percent oxygen extraction was calculated as the difference between inflow and outflow tensions multiplied by 100 and divided by inflow oxygen tension. Percent oxygen extraction was measured in all studies to assess direct vasodilatory responses separate from those caused by an autoregulatory response that may result from altered contractility. This measurement assumes that local metabolites are produced in proportion to myocardial oxygen consumption and that local metabolites are major factors controlling autoregulation of coronary flow. Oxygen tension of the inflow perfusate (155 ± 6 mmHg) was kept constant by maintaining the pressure in the reservoir container 5 mmHg above atmospheric pressure. Myocardial oxygen consumption was calculated as coronary flow times the arterial–venous oxygen content based on the hemoglobin concentration (approximately 2.8 g/100 ml) and oxygen binding of 1.34 ml O2/g hemoglobin. Cardiac efficiency was calculated as LV pressure times heart rate divided by myocardial oxygen consumption. Spontaneous heart rate, outflow oxygen tension (mmHg), coronary flow, and systolic and diastolic isovolumetric LV pressure were displayed continuously on a fast-writing (3 kHz), high-resolution, eight-channel chart recorder (Astro-Med Inc., West Warwick, RI).

After baseline control values were obtained, all hearts were gravity perfused at a constant pressure of 70 mmHg with freshly filtered (40-μm pore) and triple saline-washed canine erythrocytes diluted in Krebs-Ringer’s solution after mixing with 20% O2in nitrogen (control). Erythrocyte perfusion was necessary to attain a higher oxygen-carrying capacity because each heart had to be perfused with solution equilibrated with an oxygen fraction of only 0.2, with the balance a combination of nitrogen and/or Xe. Arterial values were as follows: hematocrit, 7.5 ± 0.4% (SEM); oxygen saturation, 100 ± 0%; Na+, 142.2 ± 1.3 mM; K+, 4.2 ± 0.0 mM; and Ca2+, 1.2 ± 0.0 mM. Trial studies with erythrocytes showed that a hematocrit of > 5% did not enhance isolated cardiac performance at an oxygen fraction of 0.2. The presence of Xe had no effect on these values. Xe MAC for the guinea pig is unknown. Xe concentrations of approximately 0.5 and 1 MAC for humans were prepared by equilibrating the perfusate with 20% O2, 40% Xe, and 40% N2, or with 20% O2and 80% Xe, respectively. These gas mixtures were prepared by injecting known volumes of the gases into evacuated gas reservoir bags and verifying that the oxygen and nitrogen fractions, measured via  mass spectroscopy, were approximately 20% and 40% or 20% and 0%, respectively. Arterial oxygen tensions were 159 ± 7 mmHg for controls, 155 ± 6 mmHg for 40% Xe, 156 ± 6 mmHg for 80% Xe, and 155 ± 5 mmHg for postcontrols.

Protocol

After a period of stabilization, adenosine (200 μl from a 200-μM stock solution) was injected directly into the aortic root cannula to determine initial maximal coronary flow during Krebs-Ringer’s perfusion. Ten minutes after initiating perfusion with the erythrocyte–Krebs-Ringer’s soluton (control), each heart was perfused for 15 min in random order with either concentration of Xe preequilibrated in the erythrocyte–Krebs-Ringer’s solution. Endothelium-dependent flow responses 19,20to bradykinin were tested in the presence and absence of Xe to assess if vasodilatory capacity is altered by Xe as it may be with volatile anesthetics. Bradykinin (100 μl from 10 nM and 1 μM stock solutions) was injected directly into the aortic root cannula during erythrocyte–Krebs-Ringer’s perfusion before and during exposure to 80% Xe. Adenosine was again injected at the end of each experiment at the same concentration to observe any change in maximal coronary flow. A Xe-free control period was interspersed between each Xe treatment.

Patch Clamp Studies

Cell Isolation.

Single cardiac myocytes were isolated from ventricles of guinea pigs weighing 200–300 g. The cell isolation procedure has been described previously. 21–24Guinea pigs were first injected intraperitoneally with sodium pentobarbitol (70 mg/kg) and 1,000 U heparin. During deep anesthesia, the thoracic cavities were opened, and the hearts were quickly excised. The hearts were then mounted on a Langendorff apparatus and perfused in retrograde fashion via  the aorta with an oxygenated buffer solution containing Joklik (minimum essential medium; Gibco, Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD). After blood was cleared from the hearts, they were perfused for approximately 14 min in an enzyme solution containing Joklik, 0.4 mg/ml collagenase (Type II; Gibco) and 0.17 mg/ml protease (Type XIV; Sigma, St. Louis, MO). The digested ventricular tissue was then chopped coarsely into small fragments and shaken in a water bath for further dispersion. The dispersed cells were filtered, centrifuged, and washed in a recovery solution containing Joklik, 1 mM CaCl2, and 1 g/100 ml bovine albumin fraction V (Serologicals, Milwaukee, WI). Additional washing in Tyrode’s solution was performed before the cells were ready for experiments. Only rod-shaped cells with clear borders and striations were selected for experiments, and they were used within 12 h of isolation.

Solutions.

High-resistance seals and voltage clamp were attained in Tyrode’s solution containing 132 mM NaCl, 4.8 mM KCl, 1.2 mM MgCl2, 10 mM HEPES, 5 mM glucose, and 1 mM CaCl2with p  H adjusted to 7.4 with NaOH. After voltage clamp was established, the external bath solution was changed to a solution that isolated either the INa, the ICa,L, or the IKirchannel current. The bath solution for recording INacontained 115 mM CsCl, 10 mM NaCl, 10 mM HEPES, 1 mM MgCl2, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 5.5 mM glucose, and 3 mM CoCl2to block ICa,L. The p  H was adjusted to 7.2 with CsOH. For ICa,L, the sodium-free bath solution contained 132 mM N -methyl-D-glucamine, 2 mM CaCl2, 4.8 mM CsCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 10 mM HEPES, and 5 mM glucose, with p  H adjusted to 7.4 with HCl. For IKir, the bath solution contained 132 mM N -methyl-D-glucamine, 1 mM CaCl2, 2 mM MgCl2, 5 mM KCl, 10 mM HEPES, and 5 mM glucose, with p  H adjusted to 7.4 with HCl. CdCl2, 200 μM, was also included to block ICa,L. The corresponding pipette solutions for each current recording were as follows. For ICa,L, the solution contained 110 mM CsCl, 10 mM HEPES, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM CaCl2, 11 mM EGTA, 5 mM K2ATP, and p  H adjusted to 7.3 with CsOH. For INa, the solution contained 90 mM CsF, 60 mM CsCl, 10 mM NaF, 1 mM CaCl2, 2 mM MgATP, 10 mM HEPES, 11 mM EGTA, and p  H adjusted to 7.3 with CsOH. Finally, for IKir, the solution contained 50 mM KCl, 60 mM K-glutamate, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM CaCl2, 5 mM K2ATP, 10 mM HEPES, 11 mM EGTA, and p  H adjusted to 7.3 with KOH.

At least 1 MAC of each of three different anesthetics, Xe, sevoflurane, and halothane, were examined. Xe was provided by Messer-Griesheim AG (Duisburg, Germany). Sevoflurane (Maruishi Pharmaceutical, Osaka, Japan) was obtained from Abbott Laboratories (North Chicago, IL), and halothane was obtained from Halocarbon Laboratories (River Edge, NJ). The anesthetics were contained in glass syringes and delivered via  a peristaltic pump. Loss of anesthetics was minimized by using Teflon (Cole-Parmer, Vernon Hills, IL) tubing for the delivery system and by selecting cells close to the inflow mouth of the recording chamber. For sevoflurane and halothane, anesthetic concentrations in the chamber were determined by standard gas chromatography after each experiment as noted previously. 21,22The Xe gas mixture was prepared by injecting known volumes of Xe, oxygen, and external bath solution into evacuated air-tight gas reservoir bags in a manner like that for the isolated heart studies. The volume ratio of gas to solution was set to 10 to ensure proper partial pressures of the gases. After vigorous shaking for several minutes to facilitate equilibration, oxygen partial pressure was verified to be near 150 mmHg at one atmosphere. The external solution containing Xe was delivered via  a peristaltic pump from an airtight glass syringe (50 ml), and data were recorded while exchanging solution to ensure control of the Xe concentration. The exchange time for extracellular solution (2–3 min) was based on attainment of steady-state effects.

Recording Procedures and Data Analysis.

Current measurements were obtained using the whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp technique at room temperature. Pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass (Garner, Claremont, CA) using a horizontal puller (Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA) and heat polished with a microforge (Narishige, Tokyo, Japan). Pipette resistances ranged from 1.8 to 2.3 MΩ. Current was measured with a List EPC-7 patch clamp amplifier (Adams & List Associates, Great Neck, NY) interfaced to a computer via  a TL-1 Labmaster (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). The pClamp software (Version 6.0; Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) was used for data acquisition and analysis.

The voltage protocol for INa, ICa,L, and IKirwere as follows: INawas recorded during 30-ms test pulses to +30 mV (10-mV increments) from a holding potential of −110 mV. For ICa,L, current was elicited by 50-ms test pulses to +50 mV (10-mV increments) from a holding potential of −50 mV. IKirwas elicited by 50-ms test pulses to +50 mV (10-mV increments) from a holding potential of −40 mV.

Statistics

Data are expressed as means ± SEM. Each isolated heart served as its own control. Responses to Xe were compared with the preceding controls by two-way analysis of variance in the intact heart studies. The effects of anesthetic concentrations on coronary flow and percent oxygen extraction during infusion of bradykinin were compared by Tukey comparison of means tests after analysis of variance for repeated measures (Super Anova 1.11 software for Macintosh; Abacus Concepts, Inc., Berkeley, CA). For the patch clamp studies, the number of cells studied in each experiment is denoted by n. Each cell served as its own control. Statistical significance in the patch clamp studies was evaluated using paired Student t  test. Differences among means were considered statistically significant when P = 0.05.

Isolated Heart Studies

Figure 1summarizes effects of exposure to Xe on eight measured or calculated variables in 16 isolated guinea pig hearts. Xe, 40% and 80%, did not alter the measured values of any variable from initial controls; post-Xe control values (postcontrol) were also not different from the initial controls. The lower LV pressure reflects the lower perfusate CaCl2used in this study compared to our previous studies using crystalloid perfusate. Effluent values for coronary sinus oxygen tension and H+concentration, respectively, were 66 ± 3 mmHg and 191 ± 9 nM (control), 61 ± 4 mmHg and 204 ± 8 nM (40% Xe), 61 ± 4 mmHg and 204 ± 8 nM (80% Xe), and 61 ± 5 mmHg and 208 ± 10 nM (postcontrol). These values were not different between Xe treatments and controls (control or postcontrol, 0% Xe). Figure 2shows that bradykinin increased flow similarly in the presence and absence of 80% Xe. On return to Krebs-Ringer’s perfusion, post–erythrocyte perfusion values were similar to preperfusion values.

Patch Clamp Studies

The effects of 80% Xe on the cardiac INa, IKir, and ICa,Lcurrents in three myocytes are shown in figure 3. The superimposed current traces and corresponding current–voltage relationships indicate that Xe had no significant effects on the cardiac ionic currents measured. Figure 4shows that current amplitude, measured at +10 mV for ICa,L, −20 mV for INa, and −110 mV for IKir, was not significantly altered by Xe:−2 ± 3% for ICa,L(n = 5), −2 ± 2% for INa(n = 7), and −4 ± 3% for IKir(n = 5). These results are unlike the inhibitory effects on cardiac currents of halothane and sevoflurane at or above 1 MAC, as also shown in figure 4. These effects of halothane and sevoflurane on INaand sevoflurane on IKirhave been previously reported by our laboratory. 21,22Sevoflurane was tested at 3.0% on ICa,L(n = 7), 2.0% on INa(n = 14), and 2.6% on IKir(n = 5). The concentrations of halothane on the corresponding ionic currents were 1.2% (n = 19), 1.0% (n = 12), and 2.0% (n = 7), respectively. 21,22At these anesthetic concentrations, sevoflurane and halothane significantly inhibited ICa,L, INa, and IKir.

This is the first study to demonstrate that Xe has no obvious mechanical, electrical, or metabolic cardiac effects in intact, isolated perfused hearts or on ICa,L, INa, and IKircurrents in isolated cardiomyocytes of the guinea pig. Specifically, in the erythrocyte–Krebs-Ringer’s perfused isolated heart, devoid of nervous or hormonal influences, Xe did not significantly alter heart rate, atrioventricular conduction time, coronary flow, or flow responses to bradykinin, isovolumetric LV pressure, percent oxygen extraction, myocardial oxygen consumption, or cardiac work efficiency. In isolated cardiac myocytes, Xe had no significant effect on the current voltage relationships of the three cardiac ion currents recorded, INa, ICa,L, and IKir. Our results suggest that Xe, unlike volatile anesthetics at equivalent MAC, 15–18has no, or very minimal, physiologically important effects on the heart.

Our findings agree generally with other studies in which the cardiovascular effects of Xe have been examined. Inhalation of Xe has been reported not to cause circulatory instability in pigs. 25Xe produces minimal cardiovascular actions in the presence of isoflurane in dogs with and without experimental dilated cardiomyopathy. 26In humans, Xe has also been found not to produce adverse effects. 7–12Although Xe is only moderately more efficacious than N2O, Xe has a rapid onset and offset of action and it is nonpolluting and nonmetabolized. Xe has a blood:gas partition coefficient of 0.14, which is significantly lower than those of other clinically used inhalational anesthetics, 6and even lower than that of N2O (0.47), sevoflurane (0.65), or desflurane (0.42), a property that predicts a more rapid onset of anesthesia and a more rapid emergence from anesthesia by Xe relative to all other commonly used anesthetics. 11,12 

Cellular membranes are regarded as the primary site for the complex action of anesthetics. Many studies have shown that both volatile and intravenous anesthetics exert potent—usually inhibitory—interaction with current flow through ion channels. Even among chemically similar anesthetics, mechanisms involved in ion current inhibition differ widely. For example, we have demonstrated that the volatile anesthetic halothane shows a conformational state–dependent effect on INa. 23Furthermore, halothane affects INaby interference with G-protein–dependent and cyclic adenosine monophosphate–dependent pathways. 24In the same studies, the chemically related volatile anesthetic isoflurane showed potent effects on INaas well, but the mechanisms of action were different as cyclic adenosine monophosphate–dependent pathways were not affected. However, as a third volatile anesthetic, sevoflurane is characterized by unique effects on cardiac ion channels such as IKir. 22 

This is the first study to demonstrate that the gaseous anesthetic Xe has no obvious cardiac effects on the subcellular level, e.g. , on ion channel protein function. The lack of direct myocardial and cardiomyocyte effects of Xe suggests that Xe has no effect on excitable muscle tissue, yet it has anesthetic activity on the nervous system. This may arise from a much lesser ion channel sensitivity of Xe for cardiac and smooth muscle cells than for neurons. The anesthetic mechanism of action of Xe remains to be determined, although some advances have been made recently.

Because Xe is uncharged and nonpolar in the gaseous state, the mechanism by which it produces anesthesia remains to be fully explained. The lack of effect of Xe compared with the commonly used anesthetics on cardiac myocyte currents and myocardial function suggests that anesthesia may not be necessarily mediated via  alteration of ion channel protein binding or channel conformation. Trudell et al.  27have modeled a binding site for Xe and other inert molecules in metmyoglobin in which the binding energy derived from hyperbaric gas experiments was matched to calculated binding energies that would result (1) from induction of a dipole in the Xe molecule by a charged binding site on metmyoglobin, and (2) from redistribution of electrons in a molecule that produces an instantaneous dipole in that molecule. They reported an association between theoretical and calculated binding energies and suggested that binding energies of inert gases can be used to predict anesthetic potency. However, the actual site of anesthetic action remains unknown.

The high cost of procuring Xe initially prevented its practical introduction into anesthesia practice. The recent development of a minimal total gas flow delivery and total rebreathing system may minimize the cost. The characteristic cardiovascular stability afforded by Xe an esthesia may be beneficial for the patient with cardiac disease who cannot tolerate the depressant effects of the commonly used volatile anesthetics. With the advent of new scavenging techniques, Xe could emerge as a practical and very safe general anesthetic.

The authors thank Mary Ziebel for conducting the gas chromatography studies, and James S. Heisner, B.S., Taft Parsons, B.S., Bethany A. Kramer, and Mark Polewski for their participation in the isolated heart studies.

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