To clarify the role of Na-i(+), pH(i), and high-energy phosphate (HEP) levels in the initiation and maintenance of ischemia-induced ventricular fibrillation (VF), interleaved Na-23 and P-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectra were collected on perfused rat hearts during low-flow ischemia (51 minutes, 1.2 mL/g wet wt). When untreated, 50% of the hearts from normal (sham) rats and 89% of the hypertrophied hearts from aortic-banded (band) rats (P<.01 versus sham) exhibited VF. Phosphocreatine content was significantly higher in sham than band hearts during control perfusion (53.3+/-1.6 versus 39.8+/-2.0 mu mol/g dry wt)/. Before VF at 20 minutes of ischemia, Na-i(+) accumulation was greater in hearts that eventually developed VF than in hearts that did not develop VF for both band and sham groups (144% versus 128% of control in sham; P<.005) and was the strongest metabolic predictor of VF; ATP depletion was also greater for VF hearts in the sham group. Infusion of the Na+-H+ exchange inhibitor 5-(N,N-hexamethylene)-amiloride prevented VF in sham and band hearts; reduced Na-i(+) accumulation but similar PIEP depiction were observed compared with VF hearts before the onset of VF. Rapid changes in Na-i(+), pH(i), and HEP began with VF, resulting in intracellular Na-i(+), overload (approximate to 300% of control) and increased HEP depletion. A delayed postischemic functional recovery occurred in VF hearts, which correlated temporally with the recovery of Na-i(+). In conclusion, alterations in Na-i(+) were associated with spontaneous VF transitions, consistent with involvement of excess Na-i(+), accumulation in VF initiation and maintenance and with previously reported alterations in Ca-i(2+) with VF. Hypertrophied band hearts exhibited enhanced susceptibility to ischemia-induced VF, possibly linked to a lower HEP reserve.