Abstract

Ventricular extrastimulation was performed in 11 patients evaluated for chronic recurrent ventricular tachycardia, before and after a 1-gm procainamide infusion. Extrastimulation caused only nonsustained extra beats (less than 4) in 3 patients. Sustained tachycardia was induced in 7 patients in the basal state, of which 6 continued to have inducible tachycardia after procainamide was given (5.2 to 9.8 mg/L). The zone of coupling intervals that initiated tachycardia was unchanged or widened in these 6 patients because ventricular refractoriness was unchanged or because the tachycardia zone shifted to later diastole by an interval at least equivalent to the prolongation of ventricular refractoriness. Post-procainamide tachycardia cycle length was prolonged in all patients, by an average 51 msec. The one patient who responded to procainamide had a shortened ventricular refractory period, but the greatest slowing of tachycardia. Finally, sustained ventricular tachycardia could be induced in the eleventh patient only following procainamide administration, consistent with his clinical history. These results suggest that procainamide often may be ineffective in preventing sustained ventricular tachycardia, and that slowed conduction, rather than prolonged refractoriness, is the basis for the procainamide antiarrhythmic effect. Our data emphasize that antiarrhythmic drug effectiveness be evaluated in terms of effect on sustained arrhythmia rather than suppression of isolated ectopic beats.

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