Circulation, Vol 57, 115-122, Copyright © 1978 by American Heart Association
JV Nixon, W Pennington, W Ritter and W Shapiro
The effect of propranolol on exercise-induced or augmented ventricular
ectopy was studied in sixteen male patients, six of whom had documented
coronary artery disease. Fifteen patients were exercised after two weeks of
oral therapy, fourteen after single oral therapy and eight patients after
intravenous therapy. Propranolol dosage was titrated to produce maximal
beta-adrenergic blockade. Effective reduction of exercise-induced
ventricular ectopy occurred in ten of fifteen patients (P less than 0.001),
and in five of six patients with coronary disease (P less than 0.02).
Propranolol therapy abolished ventricular couplets in eight of twelve
patients and ventricular tachycardia in four of the patients. Single oral
and intravenous therapy had similar or greater effects. Plasma propranolol
levels following different routes of administration did not correlate with
exercise-induced maximal heart rates or percent reduction in ventricular
ectopy. When compared to exercise in eleven patients, ambulatory monitoring
underestimated the severity, particularly the highest grades, of
ventricular ectopy.
ARTICLES
Efficacy of propranolol in the control of exercise-induced or augmented ventricular ectopic activity
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