Objective: To describe the case of a patient who developed symptomatic bradycardia upon initiation of oral ziprasidone and later with oral aripiprazole, both of which resolved shortly after discontinuation of therapy.
Case Summary: An 18-year-old female with bipolar disorder was started on oral ziprasidone 80 mg at night and the dose was subsequently increased to 120 mg for management of acute mania and delusions. The patient developed symptomatic bradycardia (heart rate 31-35 beats/min), which resolved after ziprasidone was decreased to 80 mg. Three months later, the patient was readmitted for treatment of bipolar mania with psychotic features in the context of medication nonadherence. She was started on oral aripiprazole 15 mg daily (subsequently increased to 20 mg) in conjunction with 600 mg lithium carbonate twice daily. The patient again developed symptomatic bradycardia that resolved after discontinuation of aripiprazole.
Discussion: This is the first case report of symptomatic bradycardia associated with the use of ziprasidone or aripiprazole. The Naranjo probability scale suggests that the likelihood of the atypical antipsychotic as the cause of bradycardia is probable for both ziprasidone and aripiprazole. Symptomatic bradycardia with the use of other atypical antipsychotics has been reported in the literature. Little is known about the mechanisms that contribute to the antipsychotic-associated bradycardic response.
Conclusions: Further studies are needed to better determine the relationship between antipsychotics and reflex bradycardia. Although bradycardia remains a relatively uncommon phenomenon seen with the use of these medications, the severity of this potential adverse effect warrants consideration when initiating antipsychotic therapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1345/aph.1M621 | DOI Listing |
JACC Case Rep
November 2024
Department of Medicine, Lillehei Heart Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
A 78-year-old man with cardiac amyloidosis developed sinus bradycardia with symptomatic hypotension. Three months after receiving an advanced biventricular pacemaker system with continuous accelerated rate pacing (daytime: 70 beats/min; nighttime: 90 beats/min), his health status and symptoms were markedly improved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian Pacing Electrophysiol J
December 2024
Division of Pediatric Cardiology and Adult Congenital Cardiology, UC Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, USA. Electronic address:
Introduction: There is no prior report of an Aveir leadless pacemaker implantation into the atrial appendage via the internal jugular vein.
Case: A 44-year-old female patient with history of multiple ablations for sinus node dysfunction presented with symptomatic bradycardia. The patient had femoral veins <9mm, chronic pain at the femoral vein insertion sites, as well as a recent car accident with persistent leg pain due to femoral fractures.
Cardiol J
November 2024
Department of Cardiology, Center for Heart Diseases, 4th Military Hospital, Wroclaw, Poland.
JACC Clin Electrophysiol
November 2024
Section of Cardiac Electrophysiology, Department of Cardiology, OhioHealth Heart and Vascular Physicians, Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Background: Sotalol is a class III antiarrhythmic drug used for the management of patients with atrial fibrillation to maintain sinus rhythm. Sotalol-induced QT interval prolongation can be proarrhythmic and is conventionally initiated in an inpatient setting where routine electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring is available while sotalol reaches the steady state. The emergence of cellular-compatible home ECG devices, such as AliveCor's Kardia Mobile 6L, which offers 6-lead ECG, has made it possible to accurately measure QT intervals outside the hospital.
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