Abstract
Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HyperPP) is a hereditary disorder characterized by alternate episodic attacks of muscle weakness and muscle myotonia. The most common mutation associated with HyperPP is a T704M substitution in the skeletal-muscle sodium channel. This mutation increases sodium persistent currents, alters voltage dependence of activation and impairs slow inactivation. The present study shows experimental evidence in support of a potentially important global defect caused by the T704M mutation. While the effective rate of recovery from slow inactivation, in both normal and mutated channels, is related to the duration of past activity by a power law function, the scaling power of the mutated channel is significantly greater. This difference between the channels offers a clue for an explanation to the wide range of time scales, history dependence, and the mixed myotonic/paralysis effect, which mark the clinical picture of HyperPP.
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Received: 3 February 1999 / Received after revision: 11 March 1999 / Accepted: 15 March 1999
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Melamed-Frank, M., Marom, S. A global defect in scaling relationship between electrical activity and availability of muscle sodium channels in hyperkalemic periodic paralysis. Pflügers Arch 438, 213–217 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004240050900
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004240050900