Pilot study: Noninvasive monitoring of oral flecainide's effects on atrial electrophysiology during persistent human atrial fibrillation using the surface electrocardiogram
(2005) In Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology 10(2). p.206-210- Abstract
- Background: The relation between flecainide's plasma level and its influence on human atrial electrophysiology during acute and maintenance therapy of atrial fibrillation (AF) is unknown. Therefore, this study determined flecainide plasma levels and atrial fibrillatory rate obtained from the surface ECG during initiation and early maintenance of oral flecainice in patients with persistent lone AF and assessed their relationship. Methods and Results: In 10 patients (5 males, mean age 63 14 years, left atrial diameter 46 +/- 3 mm) with persistent lone AF, flecainide was administered as a single oral bolus (day 1) followed by 200-400 mg/day (days 2-5). The initial 300 mg flecainide bolus resulted in therapeutic plasma levels in all patients... (More)
- Background: The relation between flecainide's plasma level and its influence on human atrial electrophysiology during acute and maintenance therapy of atrial fibrillation (AF) is unknown. Therefore, this study determined flecainide plasma levels and atrial fibrillatory rate obtained from the surface ECG during initiation and early maintenance of oral flecainice in patients with persistent lone AF and assessed their relationship. Methods and Results: In 10 patients (5 males, mean age 63 14 years, left atrial diameter 46 +/- 3 mm) with persistent lone AF, flecainide was administered as a single oral bolus (day 1) followed by 200-400 mg/day (days 2-5). The initial 300 mg flecainide bolus resulted in therapeutic plasma levels in all patients (range 288-629 ng/ml) with no side effects. Flecainide plasma levels increased on day 3 and remained stable thereafter. Day 5 plasma levels were lower (508 +/- 135 vs 974 :E 276 ng/ml, P = 0.009) in patients with daily mean flecainide doses of 200 mg compared to patients with higher maintenance doses. Fibrillatory rate obtained from the surface electrocardiogram measuring 378 +/- 17 fpm at baseline was reduced to 270 +/- 18 fpm (P < 0.001) after the flecainice bolus but remained stable thereafter. Fibrillatory rate reduction was independent of flecainide plasma levels or clinical variables. Conclusion: A 300 mg oral flecainide bolus is associated with electrophysio logic effects that are not increased during early maintenance therapy in persistent human lone AF In contrast to drug plasma levels, serial analysis of fibrillatory rate allows monitoring of individual drug effects on atrial electrophysiology. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/243830
- author
- Husser, D ; Binias, KH ; Stridh, Martin LU ; Sörnmo, Leif LU ; Olsson, Bertil LU ; Molling, J ; Geller, C ; Klein, HU and Bollmann, A
- organization
- publishing date
- 2005
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology
- volume
- 10
- issue
- 2
- pages
- 206 - 210
- publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:15842433
- wos:000228826100012
- scopus:18444405841
- ISSN
- 1082-720X
- DOI
- 10.1111/j.1542-474X.2005.05616.x
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 7703d3f9-1c00-455e-b79b-acd98e9ad8d1 (old id 243830)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 12:06:14
- date last changed
- 2022-04-21 02:31:16
@article{7703d3f9-1c00-455e-b79b-acd98e9ad8d1, abstract = {{Background: The relation between flecainide's plasma level and its influence on human atrial electrophysiology during acute and maintenance therapy of atrial fibrillation (AF) is unknown. Therefore, this study determined flecainide plasma levels and atrial fibrillatory rate obtained from the surface ECG during initiation and early maintenance of oral flecainice in patients with persistent lone AF and assessed their relationship. Methods and Results: In 10 patients (5 males, mean age 63 14 years, left atrial diameter 46 +/- 3 mm) with persistent lone AF, flecainide was administered as a single oral bolus (day 1) followed by 200-400 mg/day (days 2-5). The initial 300 mg flecainide bolus resulted in therapeutic plasma levels in all patients (range 288-629 ng/ml) with no side effects. Flecainide plasma levels increased on day 3 and remained stable thereafter. Day 5 plasma levels were lower (508 +/- 135 vs 974 :E 276 ng/ml, P = 0.009) in patients with daily mean flecainide doses of 200 mg compared to patients with higher maintenance doses. Fibrillatory rate obtained from the surface electrocardiogram measuring 378 +/- 17 fpm at baseline was reduced to 270 +/- 18 fpm (P < 0.001) after the flecainice bolus but remained stable thereafter. Fibrillatory rate reduction was independent of flecainide plasma levels or clinical variables. Conclusion: A 300 mg oral flecainide bolus is associated with electrophysio logic effects that are not increased during early maintenance therapy in persistent human lone AF In contrast to drug plasma levels, serial analysis of fibrillatory rate allows monitoring of individual drug effects on atrial electrophysiology.}}, author = {{Husser, D and Binias, KH and Stridh, Martin and Sörnmo, Leif and Olsson, Bertil and Molling, J and Geller, C and Klein, HU and Bollmann, A}}, issn = {{1082-720X}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{2}}, pages = {{206--210}}, publisher = {{Wiley-Blackwell}}, series = {{Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology}}, title = {{Pilot study: Noninvasive monitoring of oral flecainide's effects on atrial electrophysiology during persistent human atrial fibrillation using the surface electrocardiogram}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-474X.2005.05616.x}}, doi = {{10.1111/j.1542-474X.2005.05616.x}}, volume = {{10}}, year = {{2005}}, }