Antiarrhythmic drugs
Dr.R. Prameela MD
LECTURE’S OUTLINE:
Electrophysiology of the heart
Arrhythmia: definition, mechanisms,
types
Drugs :class I, II, III, IV
Guide to treat some types of arrhythmia
Questions
Physiology of the normal heart
Normal conduction pathway:
1- SA node generates Other types of
action potential and conduction that occurs
delivers it to the atria between myocardial
and the AV node cells:
When a cell is
depolarized
2- The AV node delivers adjacent cell
the impulse to purkinje depolarizes along
fibers
3- purkinje fibers
conduct the impulse to
the ventricles
Action potential of the heart:
In the atria, In the SA node and
purkinje, and AV node, AP curve
ventricles the AP consists of 3 phases
curve consists of 5
phases
Non-pacemaker action potential
Phase 1: partial
repolarization
Due to rapid efflux of K+
Phase 2: plateu
Phase 0: fast
Due to Ca++ influx
upstroke
Due to Na+
influx
Phase 3:
repolarization
Due to K+ efflux
Phase 4: resting
membrane potential
N.B. The slope of phase 0 = conduction velocity
Also the peak of phase 0 = Vmax
Pacemaker AP
Phase 0: upstroke: Phase 3:
Due to Ca++ influx repolarization:
Due to K+ efflux
Phase 4: pacemaker
potential
Na influx and K efflux and
Ca influx until the cell
reaches threshold and
then turns into phase 0
Pacemaker cells (automatic cells) have
unstable membrane potential so they can
generate AP spontaneously
Effective refractory period (ERP)
It is also called absolute refractory period (ARP)
:
• In this period the cell can’t be excited
• Takes place between phase 0 and 3
Arrhythmia
Arrhythmia /dysrhythmia: abnormality in the site of origin
of impulse, rate, or conduction
Causes of arrhythmia
If the arrhythmia
arises from atria, SA
node, or AV node it is
called arteriosclerosis
supraventricular
arrhythmia
Coronary artery
spasm
If the arrhythmia Heart block
arises from the
ventricles it is called
ventricular Myocardial
arrhythmia ischemia
Mechnisms of Arrhythmogenesis
Abnormal impulse generation -1
Automatic rhythms Triggered rhythms
Ectopic focus
Enhanced normal automaticity Delayed Early
afterdepolarization afterdepolarization
AP arises from sites
other than SA node
↑AP from SA node
2-Abnormal conduction
Conduction block Reentry
1st degree 2nd degree 3rd degree Circus movement Reflection
This is when the 1-This
impulse is not pathway is
conducted from the blocked
atria to the
ventricles
3-So the cells here will be
reexcited (first by the
original pathway and the
2-The impulse from
other from the retrograde)
this pathway travels
in a retrograde
fashion (backward)
Abnormal anatomic conduction
Here is an
accessory
pathway in the
heart called
Bundle of Kent
• Present only in small populations
• Lead to reexcitation Wolf-Parkinson-White
Syndrome (WPW)
Action of drugs
In case of abnormal generation: In case of abnormal conduction:
Decrease of phase 4 ↑ERP
↓conduction
slope (in pacemaker (so the cell
velocity (remember
cells) won’t be
phase 0)
reexcited
again)
Before drug
Raises the threshold
after
phase4
Types of Arrhythmia
Supraventricular Arrhythmias
Sinus Tachycardia: high sinus rate of 100-180 beats/min,
occurs during exercise or other conditions that lead to
increased SA nodal firing rate
Atrial Tachycardia: a series of 3 or more consecutive atrial
premature beats occurring at a frequency >100/min
Paroxysmal Atrial Tachycardia (PAT): tachycardia which begins
and ends in acute manner
Atrial Flutter: sinus rate of 250-350 beats/min.
Atrial Fibrillation: uncoordinated atrial depolarizations.
AV blocks
A conduction block within the AV node , occasionally in the
bundle of His, that impairs impulse conduction from the atria
to the ventricles.
ventricular Arrhythmias
Ventricular Premature Beats (VPBs): caused by ectopic
ventricular foci; characterized by widened QRS.
Ventricular Tachycardia (VT): high ventricular rate caused by
abnormal ventricular automaticity or by intraventricular
reentry; can be sustained or non-sustained (paroxysmal);
characterized by widened QRS; rates of 100 to 200 beats/min;
life-threatening.
Ventricular Flutter - ventricular depolarizations >200/min.
Ventricular Fibrillation - uncoordinated ventricular
depolarizations
Pharmacologic Rationale & Goals
The ultimate goal of antiarrhythmic drug therapy:
o Restore normal sinus rhythm and conduction
o Prevent more serious and possibly lethal
arrhythmias from occurring.
Antiarrhythmic drugs are used to:
decrease conduction velocity
change the duration of the effective refractory
period (ERP)
suppress abnormal automaticity
Antyarrhythmic drugs
• Most antiarrhythmic drugs are pro-arrhythmic (promote arrhythmia)
• They are classified according to Vaughan William into four classes according to their effects
on the cardiac action potential
class mechanism action notes
Can abolish
Change the slope of tachyarrhythmia
I Na+ channel blocker
phase 0 caused by reentry
circuit
↓heart rate and Can indirectly alter K
II β blocker conduction velocity and Ca conductance
1. ↑action potential
duration (APD) or
III K+ channel blocker effective refractory Inhibit reentry
tachycardia
period (ERP).
2. Delay repolarization.
Slowing the rate of rise in ↓conduction velocity
IV Ca channel blocker
++
phase 4 of SA node(slide
in SA and AV node
12)
Class I drugs
Class I
Have moderate K+ channel IA IB IC
blockade
They ↓ conduction velocity in non-nodal tissues
They act on open Na +
(atria, ventricles, and purkinje fibers)
channels or
inactivated only
So they are used when
many Na+ channels are
opened or inactivated
(in tachycardia only)
because in normal
rhythm the channels
will be at rest state so
the drugs won’t work
Class IA
Quinidine Procainamide
Mechanism of action
• Slowing of the rate of rise in
phase 0 ↓conduction
velocity
• ↓of Vmax of the cardiac action
potential
• They prolong muscle action
potential & ventricular (ERP)
• They ↓ the slope of Phase 4
spontaneous depolarization (SA
node) decrease enhanced
normal automaticity They make the
slope more
horizontal
Class IA Drugs
They possess intermediate rate of association and
dissociation (moderate effect) with sodium channels.
Pharmacokinetics:
procainamide
Good oral bioavailability
Used as IV to avoid hypotension
Procainamide metabolized into N-acetylprocainamide (NAPA) (active class III)
which is cleared by the kidney (avoid in renal failure)
Class IA Drugs Uses
Supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias
Quinidine is rarely used for supraventricular
arrhythmias
Oral quinidine/procainamide are used with class III
drugs in refractory ventricular tachycardia patients with
implantable defibrillator
IV procainamide used for hemodynamically stable
ventricular tachycardia
IV procainamide is used for acute conversion of atrial
fibrillation including Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome
(WPWS)
defibrillator
Class IA Drugs Toxicity
quinidine procainamide
AV block Asystole or ventricular
arrhythmia
Torsades de pointes arrhythmia
because it ↑ ERP (QT interval)
Hypersensitivity :
fever, agranulocytosis
Shortens A-V nodal refractoriness
(↑AV conduction) by
antimuscarinic like effect Systemic lupus erythromatosus (SLE)-like
symptoms: arthralgia, fever, pleural-pericardial
↑digoxin concentration by : inflammation.
1- displace from tissue binding
sites Symptoms are dose and time dependent
2- ↓renal clearance
Common in patients with slow hepatic
Ventricular acetylation
tachycardia
Notes:
Torsades de pointes: twisting of the point . Type of
tachycardia that gives special characteristics on ECG
At large dosesof quinidine cinchonism occurs:blurred vision, tinnitus, headache, psychosis
and gastrointestinal upset
Digoxin is administered before quinidine to prevent the conversion of atrial fibrillation or flutter
into paradoxical ventricular tachycardia
Class IB
Class IB Drugs
lidocaine mexiletine tocainide
• They shorten Phase 3 repolarization
• ↓ the duration of the cardiac action
potential
• They suppress arrhythmias caused
by abnormal automaticity
They show rapid association &
dissociation (weak effect) with Na+
channels with appreciable degree of
use-dependence
No effect on conduction velocity
Agents of Class IB
Lidocaine Mexiletine
Used IV because of extensive 1st pass These are the oral analogs of lidocaine
metabolism
Mexiletine is used for chronic treatment of
Lidocaine is the drug of choice in
ventricular arrhythmias associated with
emergency treatment of ventricular
previous myocardial infarction
arrhythmias
Has CNS effects: drowsiness, numbness,
convulstion, and nystagmus
:Adverse effects
neurological effects -1
negative inotropic activity -2
Uses
They are used in the treatment of ventricular arrhythmias arising during myocardial ischemia
or due to digoxin toxicity
They have little effect on atrial or AV junction arrhythmias (because they don’t act on
conduction velocity)
Class IC
flecainide propafenone
Class IC Drugs
They markedly slow Phase 0 fast
depolarization
They markedly slow conduction in the
myocardial tissue
They possess slow rate of association
and dissociation (strong effect) with
sodium channels
They only have minor effects on the
duration of action potential and
refractoriness
They reduce automaticity by
increasing the threshold potential
rather than decreasing the slope of
Phase 4 spontaneous depolarization.
Uses:
Refractory ventricular arrhythmias.
Flecainide is a particularly potent suppressant of premature
ventricular contractions (beats)
Toxicity and Cautions for Class IC Drugs:
They are severe proarrhythmogenic drugs causing:
1. severe worsening of a preexisting arrhythmia
2. de novo occurrence of life-threatening ventricular tachycardia
In patients with frequent premature ventricular contraction (PVC)
following MI, flecainide increased mortality compared to placebo.
Notice: Class 1C drugs are particularly of low safety and have shown even
increase mortality when used chronically after MI
Compare between class IA, IB, and IC drugs as regards
effect on Na+ channel & ERP
Sodium channel blockade:
IC > IA > IB
Increasing the ERP:
IA>IC>IB (lowered) Because of K+
blockade
Class II ANTIARRHYTHMIC DRUGS
(β-adrenergic blockers)
Uses
Mechanism of action
Treatment of increased
Negative inotropic and
sympathetic activity-induced
chronotropic action. arrhythmias such as stress-
Prolong AV conduction and exercise-induced
(delay) arrhythmias
Diminish phase 4 Atrial flutter and fibrillation.
depolarization AV nodal tachycardia.
suppressing Reduce mortality in post-
automaticity(of ectopic myocardial infarction patients
focus) Protection against sudden
cardiac death
Class II ANTIARRHYTHMIC DRUGS
• Propranolol (nonselective): was proved to reduce the
incidence of sudden arrhythmatic death after
myocardial infarction
• Metoprolol
reduce the risk of bronchospasm selective
• Esmolol:
Esmolol is a very short-acting β1-adrenergic blocker
that is used by intravenous route in acute arrhythmias
occurring during surgery or emergencies
Class III ANTIARRHYTHMIC DRUGS
K+ blockers
Prolongation of phase 3
repolarization without altering
phase 0 upstroke or the resting
membrane potential
They prolong both the duration
of the action potential and ERP
Their mechanism of action is still
not clear but it is thought that
they block potassium channels
Class III
sotalol amiodarone ibutilide
Uses:
Ventricular arrhythmias, especially ventricular
fibrillation or tachycardia
Supra-ventricular tachycardia
Amiodarone usage is limited due to its wide
range of side effects
Sotalol (Sotacor)
• Sotalol also prolongs the duration of action potential and
refractoriness in all cardiac tissues (by action of K+ blockade)
• Sotalol suppresses Phase 4 spontaneous depolarization and possibly
producing severe sinus bradycardia (by β blockade action)
• The β-adrenergic blockade combined with prolonged action
potential duration may be of special efficacy in prevention of
sustained ventricular tachycardia
• It may induce the polymorphic torsades de pointes ventricular
tachycardia (because it increases ERP)
Ibutilide
Used in atrial fibrillation or flutter
IV administration
May lead to torsade de pointes
Only drug in class three that possess pure K+ blockade
Amiodarone (Cordarone)
• Amiodarone is a drug of multiple actions and is still not well understood
• It is extensively taken up by tissues, especially fatty tissues (extensive distribution)
• t1/2 = 60 days
• Potent P450 inhibitor
• Amiodarone antiarrhythmic effect is complex comprising class I, II, III, and IV
actions
• Dominant effect: Prolongation of action potential duration and refractoriness
• It slows cardiac conduction, works as Ca2+ channel blocker, and as a weak β-
adrenergic blocker
Toxicity
Most common include GI intolerance, tremors, ataxia, dizziness, and hyper-or
hypothyrodism
Corneal microdeposits may be accompanied with disturbed night vision
Others: liver toxicity, photosensitivity, gray facial discoloration, neuropathy, muscle
weakness, and weight loss
The most dangerous side effect is pulmonary fibrosis which occurs in 2-5% of
the patients
Class IV ANTIARRHYTHMIC DRUGS
(Calcium Channel Blockers)
Calcium channel blockers decrease
inward Ca2+ currents resulting in a
decrease of phase 4 spontaneous
depolarization (SA node)
They slow conductance in Ca2+
current-dependent tissues like AV
node.
Examples: verapamil & diltiazem
Because they act on the heart only and
not on blood vessels.
Dihydropyridine family are not used because
they only act on blood vessels
Mechanism of action
They bind only to depolarized (open) channels prevention of repolarization
So they act only in cases of arrhythmia because many Ca 2+ channels
are depolarized while in normal rhythm many of them are at rest
They prolong ERP of AV node ↓conduction of impulses from the atria to the
ventricles
Uses
More effective in treatment of atrial than ventricular arrhythmias.
Treatment of supra-ventricular tachycardia preventing the
occurrence of ventricular arrhythmias
Treatment of atrial flutter and fibrillation
contraindication
Contraindicated in patients with pre-existing depressed
heart function because of their negative inotropic
activity
Adverse effects
Cause bradycardia, and asystole especially when given in
combination with β-adrenergic blockers
Miscellaneous Antiarrhythmic Drugs
Adenosine
o Adenosine activates A1-purinergic receptors decreasing
the SA nodal firing and automaticity, reducing
conduction velocity, prolonging effective refractory
period, and depressing AV nodal conductivity
o It is the drug of choice in the treatment of paroxysmal
supra-ventricular tachycardia
o It is used only by slow intravenous bolus
o It only has a low-profile toxicity (lead to
bronchospasm) being extremly short acting for 15
seconds only
class ECG QT Conduction Refractory
velocity period
IA ++ ↓ ↑
IB 0 no ↓
IC + ↓ no
II 0 ↓In SAN and ↑ in SAN and
AVN AVN
III ++ No ↑
IV 0 ↓ in SAN and ↑ in SAN and
AVN AVN
Treatment of atrial flutter/fibrillation
1st: Reduce thrombus formation by using anticoagulant warfarin
2nd: Prevent the arrhythmia from converting to ventricular arrhythmia:
First choice: class II drugs:
• After MI or surgery
• Avoid in case of heart failure
Second choice: class IV
Third choice: digoxin
• Only in heart failure of left ventricular dysfunction
3rd: Conversion of the arrhythmia into normal sinus rhythm:
Class III:
IV ibutilide, IV/oral amiodarone, or oral sotalol
Class IA:
Oral quinidine + digoxin (or any drug from the 2nd step)
Use direct current in case of
Class IC: unstable hemodynamic
Oral propaphenone or IV/oral flecainide patient
Treatment of ventricular arrhythmia
Premature ventricular beat (PVB)
First choice: class II
• IV followed by oral
• Early after MI
Avoid using
Second choice: amiodarone
class IC after
MI ↑
mortality
Treatment of ventricular tachycardia
First choice: Lidocaine IV
• Repeat injection
Second choice: procainamide IV
• Adjust the dose in case of renal failure
Third choice: class III drugs
• Especially amiodarone and sotalol
:تجميعات
(IA, IC, class III) torsades de pointes.
Classes II and IV bradycardia (don’t combine the two)
In atrial flutter use (1st ↓impulses from atria to ventricular to prevent ventricular
tachycardia)
1. Class II
2. Class IV
3. Digoxin.
ترتيب
( )علىا>>ل
2nd convert atrial flutter to normal sinus rhythm use:
4. Ibutilide
5. Sotalol
6. IA or IC.
ترتيب
( )علىا>>ل
If you use quinidine combine it with digoxin or β blocker (because of its anti
muscarinic effect)
Avoid IC in myocardial infarction because it ↑ mortality
QUESTIONS
1- In ventricular tachycardia and stable hemodynamic which drug to be used?
A- propranolol
B- procainamide
C- quinidine
D- verapamil
2- Mr.Green devloped an arrhythmia and was treated. A month later, he has arthralgia,
fever, pleural inflammation. What was the treatment of arrhythmia?
A- esmolol
B- class III
C- procainamide
D- propafenone
3- Cinchonism occurs with digoxin (F)
A- pulmonary fibrosis diltiazem
B- bradycardia amiodarone