# Differential effects of anesthetics and sex on supraventricular electrophysiology and atrial fibrillation substrate in rats

**Authors:** Michael Murninkas, Or Levi, Sigal Elyagon, Aviv Komissar, Neta Marom, Alon Naumchik, Noam Dalal, Gideon Gradwohl, Yoram Etzion

PMC · DOI: 10.1038/s41684-025-01532-5 · 2025-03-26

## TL;DR

This study shows that anesthetics affect heart rhythm in rats differently depending on the type of anesthetic and the sex of the rat.

## Contribution

A novel implantable device enabled unanesthetized studies of rat atrial electrophysiology, revealing sex-based differences in anesthetic effects.

## Key findings

- Both isoflurane and pentobarbital prolonged atrial effective refractory period in both sexes.
- Arrhythmic measures were higher in males and reduced by isoflurane more than pentobarbital.
- Anesthetics reduced the dominant frequency of arrhythmic events in both sexes.

## Abstract

Rodents are increasingly used in atrial electrophysiology research, yet such studies are often performed under anesthesia owing to technical challenges. Here we developed an implantable device for comprehensive atrial studies in ambulatory rats and investigated the effects of commonly used anesthetics on supraventricular electrophysiology and arrhythmic substrate, comparing them with the unanesthetized state (UAS). Adult rats were evaluated 4 weeks after implantation. Studies were conducted in the UAS under 2% isoflurane (ISO) and under 40 mg/kg pentobarbital (PEN). Pacing protocols determined various parameters, including sinoatrial node recovery time, atrioventricular node effective refractory period and atrial effective refractory period. Arrhythmic substrate was assessed after 20 triggering bursts per condition, and arrhythmic tendency was analyzed manually and through the complexity ratio, an unbiased measure recently developed by our group. PEN mildly increased heart rate in both sexes, while ISO did not affect heart rate but prolonged the corrected sinus node recovery time in males. PEN increased atrioventricular node effective refractory period in both sexes, while ISO affected males only. Both ISO and PEN prolonged atrial effective refractory period compared with UAS in both sexes. Arrhythmic measures were higher in males and were attenuated by ISO and, to a lesser extent, by PEN in males only. The dominant frequency of arrhythmic events was reduced by both anesthetics in both sexes. These findings demonstrate a significant impact of commonly used anesthetics on rat supraventricular electrophysiology, with sex-based differences, highlighting the importance of methodologies that enable cardiac electrophysiology studies in unanesthetized rodents.

The authors used an implantable electrophysiological device to assess the effects of two commonly used anesthetics (isoflurane and pentobarbital) on supraventricular electrophysiology and arrhythmic substrate in male and female rats.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** isoflurane (PubChem CID 3763), pentobarbital (PubChem CID 4737)
- **Species:** Rattus norvegicus (taxon 10116)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** arrhythmic tendency (MESH:C536965), Arrhythmic (OMIM:212500), atrial fibrillation (MESH:D001281)
- **Species:** Rattus norvegicus (brown rat, species) [taxon 10116]

## Figures

13 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11957991/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11957991