Abstract

Antiarrhythmic drugs remain the first line of therapy in patients with sustained ventricular arrhythmias. Although success with class la antiarrhythmic medications has been limited, there is evidence that the addition of a class Ib agent may improve results. A total of 110 consecutive patients referred for electrophysiologic evaluation who had inducible sustained ventricular arrhythmias resistant to a class la agent underwent repeat electrophysiologic study after the addition of a class Ib drug. Patients with ejection fraction >40% and ventricular fibrillation inducible in the baseline study had an 80% response rate, whereas those with inducible ventricular tachycardia and ejection fraction ≤40% responded 11% of the time. Responders demonstrated marked prolongation of ventricular refractoriness and slight shortening of the QRS, whereas nonresponders had QRS prolongation and a more modest increase in ventricular refractoriness. Thus, the efficacy of class Ia/Ib combination therapy in patients with inducible sustained ventricular arrhythmias refractory to a class la drugs alone can be predicted by baseline variables. Marked prolongation of ventricular refractoriness in the absence of QRS prolongation appears to be a key factor in the success of this combination.

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