Does the choice of anesthetic regimen affect the susceptibility to dofetilide-induced torsade de pointes in a chronic atrioventricular block dog model?
Anesthesia, particularly thiopental combined with isoflurane, significantly increases the susceptibility to drug-induced torsade de pointes in the chronic atrioventricular block dog model compared to the conscious state.
BACKGROUND: Drug-induced torsade de pointes (TdP) arrhythmias can readily be induced in anesthetized dogs with remodeled hearts chronic complete atrioventricular block (CAVB) dogs. Similar studies in conscious CAVB dogs reveal lower TdP incidences. Regulations forced us to reconsider our anesthetic regimen, which consist of pentobarbital followed by halothane (P + H). We investigated the relevance of anesthesia for this enhanced susceptibility (part 1) and compared 3 anesthetic regimens (part 2). METHODS: Part 1-Ten CAVB dogs paced from the high septum at 1000 milliseconds were challenged with dofetilide (25 microg x kg(-1) x 5 min(-1)) twice: once under anesthesia and once awake. Anesthesia consisted of P + H (n = 5) and thiopental maintained by isoflurane (T + I). Part 2-In CAVB dogs (n = 6) with spontaneous idioventricular rhythm, the electrophysiological and arrhythmogenic consequences of different anesthetic regimens (P + H, T + I, and P + I) were serially compared. RESULTS: Part 1-In paced dogs, dofetilide-induced TdP was higher under anesthetized than in conscious circumstances, with the more severe outcome seen after T + I as compared with P + H or control (2x): 5/5, 2/5, 0/5, and 0/5, respectively; P < 0.05. Part 2-Electrophysiologically, T accelerated idioventricular rhythm, increased QTc, and transiently induced polymorphic ventricular tachycardias in 2 of 6 dogs. This was not seen after P. At 120 minutes (end of the preparation), QTc increase was highest after T + I, intermediate with P + I, and the smallest after P + H. Dofetilide in combination with T + I induced the most severe arrhythmogenic outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Thiopental anesthesia causes arrhythmias sec, whereas anesthesia in general predisposes for drug-induced TdP in the CAVB dog. In combination with dofetilide, T + I has a more arrhythmic outcome than P + I or P + H.
Dunnink et al. (Fri,) studied this question.