Circulation, Vol 84, 101-108, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
L Toivonen, A Kadish and F Morady
BACKGROUND. Clinical experience suggests that combinations of
antiarrhythmic agents provide more effective control of ventricular
tachyarrhythmias than does therapy with single agents. METHODS AND RESULTS.
Antiarrhythmic and electrophysiological effects of three class I
antiarrhythmic agents, one from each subclass A, B, and C, were assessed in
single use and in combination with amiodarone in patients with inducible,
sustained ventricular tachycardia that was not suppressed by monotherapy
with these agents. Thirty-one patients underwent an electrophysiology test
on four occasions: at baseline; after 2-4 days of treatment with quinidine,
mexiletine, or encainide; after 2 weeks of treatment with 1,200 mg/day
amiodarone; and last, after 2-4 days of treatment with both amiodarone and
the previously tested class I agent. The combination of a class I agent and
amiodarone prevented the induction of sustained ventricular tachycardia in
only one of 31 (3%) patients. Ventricular tachycardia became
hemodynamically stable in 11 of 31 (34%) patients because of a marked
prolongation in the tachycardia cycle length. It increased from 323 +/- 39
to 423 +/- 84 msec (n = 11, p less than 0.01) by adding encainide to
amiodarone therapy, and it showed a tendency to lengthen when quinidine was
added to amiodarone (from 373 +/- 77 to 425 +/- 58 msec; n = 10, NS). Each
class I agent increased amiodarone-induced depression in myocardial
conduction, but the extent of the additional depression seemed to differ
among the three subclasses. Ventricular refractoriness was increased by all
class I agents when used in combination with amiodarone, although not by
mexiletine or encainide when used alone. CONCLUSIONS. Class I
antiarrhythmic agents slow ventricular conduction and increase ventricular
refractoriness when used in combination with amiodarone. When amiodarone
and class I drugs by themselves do not suppress the induction of
ventricular tachycardia, the combination of amiodarone and a class I agent
seldom results in noninducibility; however, it often lengthens the
ventricular tachycardia cycle length and may render the ventricular
tachycardia hemodynamically stable.
ARTICLES
A prospective comparison of class IA, B, and C antiarrhythmic agents in combination with amiodarone in patients with inducible, sustained ventricular tachycardia
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor.
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