AI Article Synopsis

  • Dipyridamole is commonly used for thallium-201 imaging to detect coronary arterial disease, and while it can cause mild noncardiac side effects like chest pain and headaches, these can usually be managed with aminophylline.
  • A case of a 45-year-old woman showed high-grade AV block and sinus arrest shortly after dipyridamole infusion, despite no signs of ischemia on the thallium scan and a normal baseline ECG.
  • The occurrence of AV block in this case raises concerns about bradyarrhythmias as a potential complication of dipyridamole, especially in those with existing conduction issues, and highlights the need for further investigation into the mechanisms behind such arrhythmias.

Article Abstract

Background: The use of dipyridamole for thallium-201 imaging has proved very successful in demonstrating coronary arterial disease, and a combination of dipyridamole and dynamic exercise is becoming widely used. Dipyridamole is safe when given intravenously, although transient noncardiac side effects are common; side effects such as chest pain, headache, and dizziness. These side effects are mostly mild, and can be treated with aminophylline.

Case Report: We describe a 45-year-old woman with normal baseline electrocardiography (ECG) and unremarkable physical examination, referred for myocardial thallium scan with dipyridamole. A few seconds after infusion of dipyridamole, her ECG developed first-degree atrioventricular (AV) block, then, 2:1 AV block, complete heart block (CHB), and sinus arrest. After aminophylline infusion, junctional escape rhythm was seen, and a few seconds later, rhythm changed to sinus rhythm. Thallium scan was negative for ischemia.

Conclusion: High-grade AV block after dipyridamole has been described in few case reports, and mostly was associated with transient myocardial ischemia; it seems that the presence of conduction abnormalities at baseline is a risk factor. But in our case, the sinus arrest and AV block occurred without evidence of ischemia in myocardial perfusion imaging, and we think it can be an unwanted complication of dipyridamole; clinicians should be aware of bradyarrhythmia as a possible complication of dipyridamole. An alternative explanation is that this arrhythmia can be caused by vagal activity; and another possibility is that the imaging study was false negative.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9931949PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.48305/arya.v18i0.2381DOI Listing

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