AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies primarily focus on torsade de pointes, but this report examines bidirectional tachycardia and lignocaine's effects on 10 patients.
  • One patient experienced a serious complication, but the majority successfully terminated their arrhythmias with lignocaine treatment.
  • The findings suggest that lignocaine is effective against digitalis-induced bidirectional and atrial tachycardia, but no comparisons to other treatment options can be made based on this study.

Article Abstract

Most recent studies discussing tachycardias with alternating QRS polarity have referred to those known as torsade de pointes. This report, in contrast, deals with bidirectional tachycardia and the effects of lignocaine on 10 patients with this arrhythmia. Three of the patients also had digitalis-induced atrial tachycardia with block. In one patient, a single bolus of lignocaine was followed (five minutes later) by ventricular fibrillation, but the other nine patients received two boluses of 75 mg followed by a drip infusion of 3 mg/min. The drug terminated the episodes of atrial tachycardia with block and bidirectional tachycardia in all patients thus treated. Whereas the abolition of the bidirectional tachycardia was permanent in the seven patients with digitalis intoxication, it recurred after stopping the drip infusion in the two patients without digitalis toxicity. It is concluded that lignocaine can be useful in the treatment of digitalis-induced bidirectional tachycardia and atrial tachycardia with block. From this study no conclusions can be drawn, however, as to whether lignocaine is superior to other class I or class IV agents.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC481198PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/hrt.48.1.27DOI Listing

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