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Abstract

To assess the effects of amiodarone and diltiazem on atrial fibrillation (AF) induced atrial electrical remodeling and their clinical implications.

Persistent AF patients were randomly assigned to three treatment groups over a period from 6 weeks before to 6 weeks after internal cardioversion: group A (35 patients, oral diltiazem), group B (34 patients, oral amiodarone) and group C (37 patients, no antiarrhythmic drugs). Several electrophysiological parameters were assessed 5 min and 24 h after cardioversion.

Compared with controls, group B patients had significantly higher conversion rates (83% vs. 100%, p = 0.041) and a higher probability to maintain sinus rhythm (p = 0.037). Patients of group B had longer fibrillatory cycle length intervals than patients of group A and C (180 +/- 18 ms vs. 161 +/- 17 ms vs. 164 +/- 19 ms, p = 0.001) and longer atrial effective refractory periods (211 +/- 22 ms vs. 198 +/- 16 ms vs. 194 +/- 17 ms, p = 0.003) as assessed 5 min after conversion. Post-conversion density of supraventricular ectopics was significantly lower in group B compared to groups A and C (p = 0.001).

Oral amiodarone increases conversion rates, prolongs fibrillatory cycle length and atrial effective refractory period and preserves sinus rhythm after cardioversion in persistent AF patients by suppressing the atrial ectopics that trigger AF.

Details

Title
Effects of amiodarone and diltiazem on persistent atrial fibrillation conversion and recurrence rates: A randomized controlled study
Author
Manios, Emmanuel G; Mavrakis, Hercules E; Kanoupakis, Emmanuel M; Kallergis, Eleftherios M; et al
Pages
31-9
Section
Clinical pharmacology and drug studies
Publication year
2003
Publication date
Jan 2003
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09203206
e-ISSN
15737241
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
213848803
Copyright
Copyright Kluwer Academic Publishers Jan 2003