The American journal of cardiology
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A prospective study correlated the effect of quinidine or procainamide versus no antiarrhythmic drug on sudden cardiac death, total cardiac death and total death in 406 elderly patients with heart disease and asymptomatic complex ventricular arrhythmias detected by 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiograms. Of 397 patients treated with quinidine, 184 (46%) developed adverse effects during the first 2 weeks of therapy and were given no further antiarrhythmic therapy. Of 9 patients treated with procainamide, 2 (22%) developed adverse effects during the first 2 weeks of therapy and were given no further antiarrhythmic therapy. ⋯ Survival by Kaplan-Meier analysis showed no significant difference between the 2 groups for sudden cardiac death, total cardiac death or total death through 4 years. Patients with abnormal left ventricular ejection fraction had a 3.4 times higher incidence of sudden cardiac death, a 2.4 times higher incidence of total cardiac death and a 1.4 times higher incidence of total death than patients with normal left ventricular ejection fraction. These data showed no significant difference in sudden cardiac death, total cardiac death or total death between patients treated with quinidine or procainamide or with no antiarrhythmic therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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To evaluate, in right ventricular (RV) myocardial infarction, the role of tricuspid regurgitation (TR) and left ventricular (LV) damage and the response to treatment of low cardiac output, 20 patients were prospectively studied. Volume infusion increased cardiac output only slightly (11%, p less than 0.001), despite a dramatic increase in ventricular filling pressures. Dobutamine (4 micrograms.kg-1.min-1) markedly increased cardiac output (24%, p less than 0.001) with a decrease in ventricular filling pressures. ⋯ All patients with RV infarction-induced low cardiac output responded only modestly to volume loading. Dobutamine is particularly efficacious in patients without TR who have depressed LV function by improving RV function and, consequently, LV preload. In the 5 patients with TR, increasing RV contractility failed to improve the forward stroke volume by increasing the regurgitant fraction.