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- Title
Sulfinpyrazone: An Antiarrhythmic Drug?
- Authors
Roos, Julius C.; Dunning, Arend J.
- Abstract
To determine whether a direct antiarrhythmic effect could explain the claimed beneficial effect of sulfinpyrazone on the sudden death rate in postmyocardial infarction patients, we performed a double-blind, randomized trial in 20 patients with impulse-formation and conduction defects. The patients were studied by intracardiac electrocardiography and programmed stimulation before and after an intravenous bolus injection of either 500 mg sulfinpyrazone or a placebo. We found no consistent clinical or statistical effects of sulfinpyrazone on sinus rate, sinus node recovery time, sinoatrial conduction time, conduction intervals during spontaneous cardiac activity and atrial pacing, Wenckebach point and refractory periods of the atrium, A V node, His Purkinje system and right ventricle. We conclude that sulfinpyrazone has no clinical electrophysiological effects comparable with those of known antiarrhythmic agents and that a direct antiarrhythmic action is an unlikely explanation for the reduction of sudden death in postinfarction patients treated with this drug. Antiarrhythmic activity by an indirect mechanism, related to the antiplatelet properties of the drug, or by metabolites of sulfinpyrazone, remains a possibility requiring further investigation.
- Subjects
MYOCARDIAL depressants; SULFINPYRAZONE; MYOCARDIAL infarction; ANTI-inflammatory agents; ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY; ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY
- Publication
Pacing & Clinical Electrophysiology, 1982, Vol 5, Issue 3, p345
- ISSN
0147-8389
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1540-8159.1982.tb02241.x