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Circulation. 1974;49:894-899

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(Circulation. 1974;49:894.)
© 1974 American Heart Association, Inc.


The Electrophysiologic Effects of Lidocaine in Patients with Intraventricular Conduction Defects

F. KUNKEL M.D.1; M. ROWLAND M.D.1; M. M. SCHEINMAN M.D.1

1 From the Medical Service, San Francisco General Hospital, and the Department of Medicine, University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco, California.

A 6 mg/kg lidocaine infusion was administered (over 22 min) to 10 patients with the electrocardiographic findings of bundle branch block. His bundle electrograms, heart rate, blood pressure, and plasma lidocaine levels were obtained before, every 5 min during, and for 20 min after the infusion was terminated. Control atrioventricular nodal conduction time (AH) was prolonged in two patients (130-175 msec) and infranodal conduction time was abnormally prolonged in four (60-100 msec). Therapeutic lidocaine levels were achieved in all patients and peak levels ranged from 3.3-11.0 µg/ml. No significant changes in mean heart rate, blood pressure, AH, His-Purkinje conduction time, or QRS duration were noted between control values and during or after the lidocaine infusion. Toxic central nervous system side effects including somnolence, dysarthria, and euphoria were noted in five subjects. Therapeutic levels of lidocaine were effective in the eradication of premature ventricular beats and safe in the sense that no higher degrees of atrioventricular or intraventricular conduction block were found; however, mild symptoms of central nervous system toxicity were commonly observed.


Key Words: Lidocaine • Heart block • Atrioventricular conduction • His bundle electrograms

Submitted on November 6, 1973
Accepted on January 9, 1974