Patients with persistent atrial fibrillation taking oral verapamil exhibit a lower atrial frequency on the ECG

Andreas Bollmann, Kai Sonne, Hans-Dieter Esperer, Ines Toepffer, Helmut U Klein, Andreas Bollmann, Kai Sonne, Hans-Dieter Esperer, Ines Toepffer, Helmut U Klein

Abstract

Background: While there is agreement that verapamil attenuates the AF- induced refractory period shortening when given before AF induction, controversy exists regarding its effects when given after the onset of persistent AF. This study aimed to compare atrial fibrillatory frequency obtained from the surface ECG in patients with persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) with oral verapamil treatment to those without this treatment.

Methods and results: Surface ECG recordings were performed in 57 patients (34 male, 23 female, mean age 59 +/- 11 years) with persistent AF (> 7 days). The frequency content of the fibrillatory baseline was quantified using digital signal processing (filtering, QRST complex averaging and subtraction, Fourier transformation). In 27 patients with verapamil treatment (120 or 240 mg/day for at least 7 days) mean fibrillatory frequency measured 6.4 +/- 0.2 Hz, compared to 7.0 +/- 0.4 Hz (P = 0.012) in 30 patients without verapamil. In a subset of 20 randomly selected patients (10 with, 10 without verapamil treatment) a 24-hour Holter ECG recording was performed and fibrillatory frequency determined at 4 PM, 10 PM, 4 AM, and 10 AM. While there was a significant frequency reduction in the verapamil treated patients at night (P = 0.011), it remained constant over time in the other patients.

Conclusion: In patients with persistent AF, fibrillatory frequency assessed by spectral analysis of the surface ECG is lower in patients taking verapamil.

Source: PubMed

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