Circulation, Vol 78, 286-295, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
MI Anastasiou-Nana, RL Menlove, JN Nanas and JL Anderson
Previous determinations of spontaneous variability in ventricular
arrhythmia have often been based on measurements from consecutive days in
small patient populations, whereas clinical determinations of drug efficacy
typically compare measurements at intervals of 1 week and longer to
baseline. We, therefore, sought to determine whether spontaneous arrhythmia
variability changes as a function of time during periods ranging from 1 day
to 1 year or longer. The percent reduction in the frequency of total
premature ventricular complexes (PVCs) and repetitive ventricular beats
required to show true drug effect rather than spontaneous variability in
PVCs was determined in 47 consecutive patients with chronic ventricular
arrhythmias who underwent multiple ambulatory monitor recordings while off
active drug treatment (during placebo therapy). The variability in PVC rate
was determined during the intervals of 1 day, 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks, 4
weeks, and 1 year or longer. The percent reductions in total PVCs required
to exceed the 95% confidence limits of spontaneous variability at these
intervals were 55%, 85%, 86%, 93%, 96%, and 96%, respectively.
Corresponding values for repetitive beats were 75%, 95%, 92%, 95%, 94%, and
98%, respectively. The percent increase in total PVCs and repetitive beats
required to establish "arrhythmia aggravation" caused by an antiarrhythmic
drug with a 95% confidence limit also was calculated for this study
population and was 124% and 303%, respectively, at 1-day intervals and
2,269% and 4,091%, respectively, at 1-year (or longer) intervals for the
24-hour monitor recordings. Variability was not substantially affected by
underlying heart disease or ejection fraction. PVC rate showed a modest
negative correlation with variability (r = 0.3). Thus, variability is
substantially greater at 1 week, the usual time for clinical assessment of
antiarrhythmic drug efficacy, than at 1 day (p less than 0.01). Suppression
of more than 85% of total PVCs and more than 95% of repetitive beats
appears to be necessary after 1-2 weeks to be confident of a true drug
effect. Even greater variability is observed after 1 month and up to 1 year
so that reductions of up to 95% in total PVCs and 98% in repetitive beats
may represent spontaneous change.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Changes in spontaneous variability of ventricular ectopic activity as a function of time in patients with chronic arrhythmias
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City.
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