Circulation, Vol 71, 450-457, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
JB Schwartz, AP Nielsen and JC Griffin
The effects of verapamil on junctional and sinoatrial activity were studied
in eight patients with third-degree atrioventricular block and stable
junctional rhythms. After intravenous infusion of verapamil three
steady-state levels were reached as follows: 34 +/- 16 (SS1), 68 +/- 30
(SS2), and 129 +/- 54 (SS3) ng/ml. At each steady-state level, spontaneous
sinus and junctional cycle lengths, QT intervals, junctional recovery times
after ventricular pacing, blood pressure, and circulating catecholamine
concentrations were measured. These measurements were compared with
observations made during an identical protocol (except for the exclusion of
verapamil infusions) on a control day. No significant changes were detected
in the spontaneous sinus or junctional cycle length, junctional recovery
times at a fixed pacing cycle length, blood pressure, or circulating
catecholamine concentrations during the control day. In response to
verapamil, the mean junctional cycle length decreased from a baseline value
of 1320 +/- 239 to 1254 +/- 210, 1199 +/- 214, 1069 +/- 151 msec at SS1,
SS2, and SS3 (p less than .01). Sinus cycle length (msec) was unaffected or
slightly lengthened from 749 +/- 165 at baseline to 821 +/- 222 at SS1, 831
+/- 222 at SS2, and 817 +/- 175 at SS3 (NS). Mean blood pressure,
circulating catecholamine concentrations, and corrected QT intervals were
also unchanged by verapamil. Verapamil enhanced junctional pacemaker
activity in patients with third-degree atrioventricular block, suggesting
that (1) these rhythms originate in cells that are not suppressed by the
slow-channel antagonism of verapamil and (2) the acceleration of junctional
activity seen in response to verapamil reflects a verapamil effect rather
than toxicity.
ARTICLES
Concentration-dependent enhancement of junctional pacemaker activity by verapamil in man
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