Abstract

To clarify the risk-benefit ratio involved in association of antiarrhythmic drugs, a combined therapy of amiodarone and propafenone was tested by means of continuous electrocardiographic monitoring, analysis of levels of the drug in the plasma and programmed electrical stimulation in a selected group of 10 patients who had left ventricular dysfunction and spontaneous relapses of sustained ventricular tachycardia despite treatment with amiodarone. Induction of sustained ventricular tachycardia, possible in each case during treatment with amiodarone, was suppressed after addition of propafenone in 2 patients (responders), who had the best ejection fractions of the entire group (> 45%). Worsening of spontaneous tachycardias developed in 4 cases during the combined therapy. These ventricular arrhythmias, although generally at a low rate, sometimes had the potential to degenerate into ventricular fibrillation and disappeared after both discontinuation of propafenone or increase of its dosage (1 patient). Of the six cases undergoing chronic combined treatment, only the responders to premature electrical stimulation were completely protected from recurrences of arrhythmia. Three cases, on the other hand, needed permanent endocardial pacing for symptomatic bradyarrhythmias. The combination of treatment with amiodarone and propafenone, although potentially useful in limiting dosages of and toxicity from amiodarone, is frequently associated with undersirable, and occasionally has severe, side-effects. The best candidates for this pharmacological association seem to be patients without severely depressed left ventricular function who have a greater probability of not presenting the inducibility of ventricular tachycardia after the addition of propafenone to the regimen for treatment.

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