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Antiarrhythmic Therapy UTHSCSA Pediatric Resident Curriculum for the PICU
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Antiarrhythmic Therapy Empiric Arrhythmia Diagnosis Interventions Clinical Outcomes Interventions Clinical Outcomes Pathophysiologic Arrhythmia Diagnosis Known or suspected mechanisms Critical components Vulnerable parameters Targeted subcellular units BLACK BOX
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Antiarrhythmic Therapy Pathophysiologic Arrhythmia Diagnosis Interventions Clinical Outcomes Known or suspected mechanisms Critical components Vulnerable parameters Targeted subcellular units AV node reentrant tachycardia AV node reentry Anatomical fast/slow pathway AV node (slow conduction) AV nodal action potential L-type Ca ++ channel Ca ++ channel blocker -blocker Sinus rhythm
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Vaughn-Williams Classification Based on cellular properties of normal His-Purkinje cells Classified on drug’s ability to block specific ionic currents (i.e. Na +, K +, Ca ++ ) and beta-adrenergic receptors Advantages: –Physiologically based –Highlights beneficial/deleterious effects of specific drugs
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Antiarrhythmic Therapy Empiric Arrhythmia Diagnosis Interventions Clinical Outcomes BLACK BOX Goals Identify the type of dysrhythmia Be familiar with more common antiarrhythmics and their Vaughn-Williams Classification
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Arrhythmia Types Slow Fast è Fast wide è Fast narrow è Too fast
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Arrhythmia-focused Therapy Fast Narrow Supraventricular tachycardias –Re-entry type Orthodromic SVT –Automatic A.E.T., Atrial Flutter J.E.T.
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Arrhythmia-focused Therapy Fast Wide –(rare) Antidromic SVT or SVT with abberancy –Ventricular tachycardia Inappropriate automaticity of ventricular or His-Purkinje tissue
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Arrhythmia-focused Therapy Select one antiarrhythmic or a limited group of antiarrhythmics to treat the disorder.
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Antiarrhythmic Agents Vaughn-Williams Classification Class I - Na + - channel blockers (direct membrane action) Class II - Sympatholytic agents Class III - Prolong repolarization Class IV- Ca ++ - channel blockers Purinergic agonists Digitalis glycosides
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The Action Potential Phase 0 Phase 4 Phase 3 Phase 2 Phase 1 - 90 mV 0 mV 30 mV
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Class I Na+ Channel Blockers Class I Na+ Channel Blockers IA - Quinidine/Procainamide/Disopyramide IB - Lidocaine/Mexiletine/Phenytoin IC - Flecainide/Propafenone/Ethmozine 1 0 2 3 4 ERPRRP Affects Phase 0
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Class IA - Na+ Channel Blockers Procainamide/Quinidine/Disopyramide Mode of action – Depress conduction and prolong refractoriness Atrial, His-Purkinje, ventricular tissue – Peripheral alpha block – Vagolytic – Negative inotrope ECG changes – Increase PR, QRS (Diso: PR > QRS ) – Toxicity: QTc increases by 30% or QT > 0.5 sec – Ca ++ channel blockade / potent anticholinergic (Diso)
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Class IA - Na+ Channel Blockers Procainamide Uses – SVT (reentry) or VT – Afib/flutter (on digoxin) Drug interactions- Decrease metabolism of Amiodarone Dose – IV: load 15 mg/kg over 1 hour, then 30-80 g/kg/min – (level 5-10 ng/ml) – PO: 30-70 mg/kg/day Side effects: Lupus- in slow acetylators – ANA 50-90% Symptoms: 20-30 %
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Arrhythmia-focused Therapy Procainamide has been a long-used intravenous infusion for a wide range of dysrhythmias: – Narrow complex tachycardia: Atrial tachycardia, resistant re-entrant tachycardia – Wide-complex tachycardia: Ventricular tachycardia Downside: Side effects, negative inotrope, pro- arrhythmic
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Class IB Lidocaine/Mexiletine/Phenytoin Mode of action – Little effect on normal tissues – Decreases Purkinje ERP/ automaticity – Increases Ventricular fibrillation threshold – Depresses conduction, esp. at high rates (Mexiletine) – Suppresses dig-induced delayed afterdepolarizations (Phenytoin) ECG changes – Slight QTc (Lidocaine/Phenytoin)
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Class IB Lidocaine Use: VT (acute) – Acts rapidly; no depression of contractility/AV conduction Kinetics – t 1/2 : 5-10 min (1st phase); 80-110 min (2nd phase) Drug interactions – Decreased metabolism w/ CHF/hepatic failure, propranolol, cimetidine – Increased metabolism w/ isuprel, phenobarbital, phenytoin Use: VT (acute) – Acts rapidly; no depression of contractility/AV conduction Kinetics – t 1/2 : 5-10 min (1st phase); 80-110 min (2nd phase) Drug interactions – Decreased metabolism w/ CHF/hepatic failure, propranolol, cimetidine – Increased metabolism w/ isuprel, phenobarbital, phenytoin
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Class IB Lidocaine Dose – 1 mg/kg, then 20-50 g/kg/min (level: 2-5 g/ml) Side effects – CNS toxicity w/ levels > 5 g/ml Dose – 1 mg/kg, then 20-50 g/kg/min (level: 2-5 g/ml) Side effects – CNS toxicity w/ levels > 5 g/ml
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Class IB Mexiletine Use: VT (post-op CHD) Kinetics: t 1/2 = 8 - 12 hrs Drug interactions- rare Dose – 3-5 mg/kg/dose (adult 200-300mg/dose) po q 8 hrs Side effects – Nausea (40%) – CNS - dizziness/tremor (25%)
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Class IB Phenytoin Uses – VT (post-op CHD), digoxin-induced arrhythmias Drug interactions – Coumadin- PT; Verapamil- effect (displaces from protein) Dose – PO: 4 mg/kg q 6 hrs x 1 day, then 5-6 mg/kg/day ÷ q 12hr – IV: bolus 15 mg/kg over 1 hr; level 15-20 g/ml Side effects – Hypotension, gingival hyperplasia, rash
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Arrhythmia-focused Therapy Class IB antiarrhythmics are very effective and very safe. Little or no effect on “normal” tissues First line for ischemic, automatic arrhythmia's (Ventricular tachycardia) Not a lot of effect on normal conduction tissue – not a good medicine for reentry and atrial tachycardias.
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Class IC Flecainide/Propafenone/Ethmozine Mode of action – Depresses abnormal automaticity (Flec/Ethmozine) – Slows conduction in AV node, AP, ventricle (Flec/Prop) – Shortens repolarization (Ethmozine) – Negative inotrope (Propafenone) – Prolongs atrial/ventricular refractoriness (Propafenone) ECG changes – PR, QRS – QTc (Propafenone)
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Class IC Flecainide Uses: PJRT, AET, CAT, SVT, VT, Afib Kinetics – t 1/2 = 13 hrs (shorter if between 1-15 mos old) Drug interactions – Increases digoxin levels (slight) – Amiodarone: increases flecainide levels
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Class IC Flecainide Dose – 70-225 mg/m 2 /day ÷ q 8-12 hr – Level: 0.2-1.0 g/ml Side effects – Negative inotrope- use in normal hearts only (NO POST-OPs) – PROARRHYTHMIA - 5-12% (CAST)
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Arrhythmia –focused Therapy IC’s have a lot of side effects that make them appropriate for use only by experienced providers.
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Class II Agents Beta-blockers Propranolol Atenolol Metoprolol Nadolol Esmolol d,l-Sotalol
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Class II Propranolol Uses – SVT (reentry, ectopic) – Sinus tachycardia (thyrotoxicosis) – VT (exercise-induced) Kinetics – t 1/2 = 3 hrs (increased if cyanotic) Drug interactions – Verapamil Hypotension Decreased LV function
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Class II Propranolol Dose – PO: 2-4 mg/kg/day q 6 hrs – IV: 0.05-0.15 mg/kg Side effects – Avoid in asthma/diabetes – CNS effects Nonpolar - crosses BBB – BP Suppresses renin-aldo-angiotensin axis
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Arrhythmia-focused Therapy Beta-blockers are good for re- entry circuits and automatic dysrhythmias. Their effect of decreasing contractility may be limiting.
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Class III K + - channel blockers Properties – Prolong repolarization – Prolong action potential duration – Contractility is unchanged or increased Agents – Amiodarone – Sotalol – Bretylium – N-acetyl Procainamide (NAPA)
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Arrhythmia-focused Therapy Can be very powerful antiarrhythmics but limited indications for first-line use – beyond the spectrum of primary care providers Amiodarone: may become a first-line medicine for a broad spectrum of arrhythmias, currently still high-risk
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Purinergic Agonists Adenosine Mode of action – Vagotonic – Anti-adrenergic – Depresses slow inward Ca ++ current – Increases K + conductance (hyperpolarizes) ECG/EP changes – Slows AV node conduction
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Purinergic Agonists Adenosine Uses – SVT- termination of reentry – Aflutter- AV block for diagnosis Kinetics – t 1/2 = < 10 secs – Metabolized by RBCs and vascular endothelial cells Dose – IV: 100-300 g/kg IV bolus
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Purinergic Agonists Adenosine Drug interactions – Methylxanthines (caffeine/theophylline) Side effects – AFib/ sinus arrest/ sinus bradycardia – Bronchospasm – Flushing/headache – Nausea Great medicine: quick onset, quick degradation.
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Digoxin Mode of action – Na-K ATPase inhibition – Positive inotrope – Vagotonic ECG changes – Increases PR interval – Depresses ST segment – Decreases QT interval
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Digoxin Use: SVT (not WPW) Kinetics – t 1/2 = preemie (61hrs), neonate (35hrs), infant (18hrs), child (37hrs), adult (35-48hrs ) Interactions Coumadin- PT Digoxin level Quinidine, amiodarone, verapamil renal function/renal tubular excretion (Spironolactone) Worse with K +, Ca ++
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Digoxin Toxicity Nausea/vomiting, lethargy, visual changes Metabolic – Hyper K +, Ca ++ – Hypo K +, Mg ++ – Hypoxemia – Hypothyroidism Proarrhythmia – AV block- decreased conduction – SVT- increased automaticity – VT- delayed afterdepolarizations
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Digoxin Toxicity Treatment GI decontamination – Ipecac/lavage/charcoal w/ cathartic Arrhythmias – SA node /AV node depression- Atropine; if dig > 6, may need pacing – SVT- Phenytoin or -blocker – VT- Lidocaine (1 mg/kg) or Phenytoin DC Cardioversion may cause refractory VT/VF!!
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Proarrhythmia Torsades de Pointes Class IA – Quinidine 2-8% – Procainamide 2-3% – Disopyramide2-3% Class III – d,l-Sotalol 1-5% – d-Sotalol 1-2% – NAPA 3-4% – Amiodarone < 1%
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Summary SVT: Initial – Adenosine – ?Propranolol – Procainamide SVT: Long Term – Nothing – Propranolol – Digoxin
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Summary VT : Initial – Lidocaine – Procainamide VT: Long Term – Lidocaine/Procainamide – Beta-blockers – Cardiologist
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60 Cycle Interference
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Atrial Flutter
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SVT
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Ventricular Tachycardia
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Ventricular Fibrillation
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