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Dept. of Physiology / Center for Cardiometabolic Science / Envirome Institute

University of Louisville School of Medicine

Louisville, Kentucky






Dept. of Physiology / Center for Cardiometabolic Science / Envirome Institute

University of Louisville School of Medicine

Louisville, Kentucky



E-cigarettes and their lone constituents induce cardiac arrhythmia and conduction defects in mice


Journal article


A. Carll, Claudia Arab, Renata Salatini, Meredith D. Miles, Matthew A. Nystoriak, Kyle L. Fulghum, D. Riggs, G. Shirk, Whitney S. Theis, Nima Talebi, A. Bhatnagar, D. Conklin
Nature Communications, 2022

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Carll, A., Arab, C., Salatini, R., Miles, M. D., Nystoriak, M. A., Fulghum, K. L., … Conklin, D. (2022). E-cigarettes and their lone constituents induce cardiac arrhythmia and conduction defects in mice. Nature Communications.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Carll, A., Claudia Arab, Renata Salatini, Meredith D. Miles, Matthew A. Nystoriak, Kyle L. Fulghum, D. Riggs, et al. “E-Cigarettes and Their Lone Constituents Induce Cardiac Arrhythmia and Conduction Defects in Mice.” Nature Communications (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Carll, A., et al. “E-Cigarettes and Their Lone Constituents Induce Cardiac Arrhythmia and Conduction Defects in Mice.” Nature Communications, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2022a,
  title = {E-cigarettes and their lone constituents induce cardiac arrhythmia and conduction defects in mice},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Nature Communications},
  author = {Carll, A. and Arab, Claudia and Salatini, Renata and Miles, Meredith D. and Nystoriak, Matthew A. and Fulghum, Kyle L. and Riggs, D. and Shirk, G. and Theis, Whitney S. and Talebi, Nima and Bhatnagar, A. and Conklin, D.}
}

Abstract

E-cigarette use has surged, but the long-term health effects remain unknown. E-cigarette aerosols containing nicotine and acrolein, a combustion and e-cigarette byproduct, may impair cardiac electrophysiology through autonomic imbalance. Here we show in mouse electrocardiograms that acute inhalation of e-cigarette aerosols disturbs cardiac conduction, in part through parasympathetic modulation. We demonstrate that, similar to acrolein or combustible cigarette smoke, aerosols from e-cigarette solvents (vegetable glycerin and propylene glycol) induce bradycardia, bradyarrhythmias, and elevations in heart rate variability during inhalation exposure, with inverse post-exposure effects. These effects are slighter with tobacco- or menthol-flavored aerosols containing nicotine, and in female mice. Yet, menthol-flavored and PG aerosols also increase ventricular arrhythmias and augment early ventricular repolarization (J amplitude), while menthol uniquely alters atrial and atrioventricular conduction. Exposure to e-cigarette aerosols from vegetable glycerin and its byproduct, acrolein, diminish heart rate and early repolarization. The pro-arrhythmic effects of solvent aerosols on ventricular repolarization and heart rate variability depend partly on parasympathetic modulation, whereas ventricular arrhythmias positively associate with early repolarization dependent on the presence of nicotine. Our study indicates that chemical constituents of e-cigarettes could contribute to cardiac risk by provoking pro-arrhythmic changes and stimulating autonomic reflexes. The use of E-cigarettes has increased despite the unknown long-term effects. Here the authors show that e-cigarette aerosols alter cardiac conduction, repolarization, and autonomic regulation in mice, contingent on the chemical composition of e-liquids and partly through parasympathetic modulation.


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