Nortriptyline treatment significantly increased the QT variability index in supine posture in patients with panic disorder (P=0.006), whereas paroxetine did not.
Observational (n=29)
Does nortriptyline or paroxetine affect QT variability in patients with panic disorder?
Nortriptyline, but not paroxetine, significantly increases QT variability in patients with panic disorder, suggesting paroxetine may be a safer choice in patients with coexisting cardiac disease.
p-value: p=0.006
This study investigated beat-to-beat QT variability in patients with panic disorder before and after treatment with nortriptyline (n = 13) and paroxetine (n = 16), using an automated algorithm to compute QT intervals. An increase in QT variability appears to be associated with symptomatic patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and also with an increased risk for sudden cardiac death. QTvi (QT variability index: a log ratio of QT variance normalized for mean QT over heart rate variability normalized for mean heart rate) was significantly higher in supine posture in patients with panic disorder treated with nortriptyline (P = 0.006) but not paroxetine. Thus paroxetine may be a better drug of choice especially in patients with coexisting cardiac disease. These findings are important especially in view of the recent reports of increased risk for cardiovascular mortality and sudden death in patients with anxiety and depression. QTvi can be a valuable noninvasive measure of temporal repolarization lability, especially to study the side effects of medications which affect cardiac autonomic function.
Yeragani et al. (Sat,) conducted a observational in Panic disorder (n=29). Nortriptyline vs. Paroxetine was evaluated on QT variability index (QTvi) in supine posture (p=0.006). Nortriptyline treatment significantly increased the QT variability index in supine posture in patients with panic disorder (P=0.006), whereas paroxetine did not.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: