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American heart journal · Aug 1987
Failure of episodic high-dose oral verapamil therapy to convert supraventricular tachycardia: a study of plasma verapamil levels and gastric motility.
- A W Hamer, D E Tanasescu, J W Marks, T Peter, A D Waxman, and W J Mandel.
- Am. Heart J. 1987 Aug 1; 114 (2): 334-42.
AbstractThe practicality of administering large oral doses of verapamil tablets to terminate supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) was investigated in 10 patients. A pilot study in four patients showed that unexpectedly low plasma levels (less than 40 ng/ml) were obtained 60 minutes after administering 160 mg or 240 mg of verapamil during SVT. Nuclear studies in the six other patients showed that fractional liquid gastric emptying times (T) were significantly prolonged in SVT compared to sinus rhythm (SR), p less than 0.05 from T 1/3 onward. Further verapamil absorption studies (200 to 360 mg) performed during SVT and SR in five of six patients showed that peak verapamil levels in four patients in SVT were 23% to 71% lower than in sinus rhythm, where they had peaked at greater than 250 ng/ml 60 minutes post verapamil ingestion, and areas under the plasma concentration time curves were 26% to 100% (mean 67%) less in SVT than in SR for all five patients. SVT was terminated by verapamil in one patient after 40 minutes and the rate of SVT was slowed after 90 minutes in two other patients. Thus plasma verapamil levels are considerably reduced during SVT as compared to SR, and changes in gastric emptying are likely a contributing cause. Since SVT was converted to sinus rhythm in only 1 of 10 patients within 1 hour, large oral doses of verapamil tablets appear unsatisfactory for the episodic treatment of SVT.
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