Does an increase in cardiac vagal drive terminate ventricular tachycardia?
Vagal mechanisms can terminate ventricular tachycardia, which alters the interpretation of vagal interventions in the bedside clinical diagnosis of wide QRS complex tachycardias.
Out of 12 patients in whom phenylephrine terminated ventricular tachycardia, four were selected for detailed studies of its mechanism of action. Pretreatment with edrophonium (15-20 mg, i.v.) decreased, while atropine (2.4 mg, i.v.) increased by at least a factor of two, the dose of phenylephrine required to break ventricular tachycardia. Carotid sinus massage following pretreatment with edrophonium in unusually high (15-20 mg, i.v.) doses broke ventricular tachycardia in all four patients. The evidence presented supports the assumption that a vagal mechanism caused both instances of termination. These findings significantly alter our interpretation of vagal interventions in the bedside clinical diagnosis of wide QRS complex tachycardias.
Waxman et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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