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Effect of aprindine on heart rate variability indices in patients with ischemic heart disease

Authors :
K. Arakawa
Kimio Satomura
B. Takase
Toshihiko Nishioka
Fumitaka Ohsuzu
Akimi Uehata
Akira Kurita
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Wiley Periodicals, Inc., 2009.

Abstract

Background: Decreased heart rate variability indices (HRV) are associated with untoward outcome of patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD). Most class I antiarrhythmic agents decrease HRV, but aprindine (a new class I antiarrhythmic agent) is reported to increase HRV in patients without ischemia. Hypothesis: The study was undertaken to determine whether aprindine might increase HRV in patients with IHD. Methods: To investigate the effect of aprindine on HRV in patients with IHD, we performed 24-h ambulatory electrocardiogram (ECG) at the end of placebo and aprindine (60 mg daily) treatment phases on 38 patients with IHD and at least isolated premature ventricular contractions (PVC). The study protocol utilized a single blind, 4-week, placebo-controlled design. Heart rate variability from ambulatory ECG included SDNN (ms), SDANN (ms), SD (ms), rMSSD (ms), pNN50 (%); frequency analysis of HRV consisting of total (ms, 0.01–1.00 Hz), low (ms, 0.04–0.15 Hz), and high (ms, 0.15–0.40 Hz) components. Results: Study patients were divided into three groups according to the severity of IHD and antiarrhythmic efficacy of aprindine. Group 1 consisted of 15 patients with angina with single-vessel disease, and Group 2 was composed of 10 patients with either multivessel disease or post myocardial infarction; PVCs decreased in both groups as a result of aprindine treatment. Group 3 consisted of 13 patients who showed no decreased PVC after aprindine treatment. RMSSD increased, and pNN50 and high-frequency spectra tended to increase in Group 1, while SD, rMSSD, pNN50, and total and low-frequency spectra decreased in Group 3; no significant changes were observed in Group 2. Aprindine significantly augments vagal activity, as reflected by the increase of rMSSD, pNN50, and high-frequency spectra in mild IHD. Conclusion: These salutary effects are less in more severe IHD, but aprindine does not aggravate HRV. Thus, if there are salutary effects on arrhythmias and no proarrhythmic effects, aprindine could be prescribed to patients with IHD without concern about decreasing HRV.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....60791790fc8677bb3f38bbc13e14fd68