Abstract

Prompt control of heart rate is important for successful treatment of supraventricular tachyarrhythmias early after open heart surgery when sympathetic tone is high and ventricular response rates may be rapid. Esmolol, a new ultrashort-acting (9 minute half-life) beta-receptor blocking agent, was given by continuous intravenous infusion for up to 24 hours in 24 patients (21 with isolated coronary bypass surgery and 3 with valve replacement) 1 to 7 days after surgery. Atrial fibrillation was present in 9 patients, atrial flutter in 2 and sinus tachycardia in 13. Eleven patients had received intravenous digoxin (average dose 0.6 mg, average serum level 1.19 mg/100 ml) before esmolol infusion without adequate control of the supraventricular tachyarrhythmia. After a 1 minute loading infusion of esmolol (500 micrograms/kg per min), maintenance dose, titrated to heart rate and blood pressure response, varied from 25 to 300 micrograms/kg per min. After esmolol administration, at an average dose of 139 +/- 83 micrograms/kg per min, mean heart rate decreased from 130 +/- 15 to 99 +/- 15 beats/min. Within 5 to 18 minutes after initiation of therapy, all patients had achieved a 15% reduction in heart rate at a maintenance dose of 150 micrograms/kg per min or less. A 20% reduction in heart rate was attained in 19 of the 24 patients, and conversion to sinus rhythm occurred during esmolol infusion in 5 of the 11 patients with atrial flutter or fibrillation. Transient asymptomatic hypotension (less than 90/50 mm Hg) was seen in 13 patients, requiring cessation of esmolol therapy in 2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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