Effects of Procainamide on the Excitable Gap Composition in Common Human Atrial Flutter

1998 
The composition of the excitable gap (EG) in common atrial flutter (AFI) was determined before and during infusion of procainamide (PA) in 9 patients (6 men and 3 women; age 70 ± 7 years). The EG was determined by introducing a premature stimulus after every 20th AFI complex detected using a quadripolar electrode catheter placed just above the tricuspid valve. Diastole was scanned in 2- to 4-ms decrements to the atrial effective refractory period (ERP). The relationship between the coupling interval and the return cycle length (CL) determined a reset-response curve (RRC), which described the EG. PA (15 mg/kg) was administered during AFl over 30 minutes and RRC was repeated at maximum AFI CL. PA prolonged AF1 CL from 227 ± 29 to 296 ± 62 ms (P < 0.01) but did not terminate AFI. ERP during AFl prolonged from 169 ± 24 to 219 ± 41 ms (P < 0.01). Control EG was 57 ± 16 ms or 25%± 6% of AFl CL and on PA EG was 77 ± 30 ms (P = 0.01), which was still 26%± 7% of the CL. Without drug, RRC was mixed in eight cases demonstrating an EG composed of fully excitable tissue (10 ± 4 ms or 19%± 10% of the EG) and partially refractory tissue (48 ± 18 ms), PA did not change the duration of the fully excitable region (13 ± 10 ms or 19%± 15% of EG). Peak PA plasma concentration was 47 ± 20 μmol/L. PA prolonged AFI CL, ERP, and EG duration but did not change the proportion of AFI CL occupied by the EG. The persistence of fully excitable tissue at the head of the wavefront in the presence of PA may largely explain its inefficacy in the acute termination of common AFl.
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