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Controlling Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation by a Combination of Amiodarone and Flecainide: Description of a Case With 15-Year Follow-up

A 77-year-old man with no known cardiac disease has had paroxysmal atrial fibrillation for 35 years with disabling symptoms and poor exercise tolerance when not in sinus rhythm, and he did not respond to conventional therapy. Fifteen years ago he was placed on amiodarone. His arrhythmia converted to...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of cardiovascular pharmacology and therapeutics 1996-10, Vol.1 (4), p.333-338
Main Authors: Altamirano, Jaime, Gallik, Donna M., Singh, Bramah N.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:A 77-year-old man with no known cardiac disease has had paroxysmal atrial fibrillation for 35 years with disabling symptoms and poor exercise tolerance when not in sinus rhythm, and he did not respond to conventional therapy. Fifteen years ago he was placed on amiodarone. His arrhythmia converted to atrial flutter with a flutter rate below 200 beats/min; DC cardioversion at 3 months led to transient sinus rhythm. At 5 months he converted spontaneously to sinus rhythm and had very few recurrences until 4 years later when he began to experience further frequent recurrences when the dose was reduced from 400 mg/day to 200 mg/day. Redosing at the higher dose led to skin discoloration; amiodarone was then replaced with sotalol, which the patient did not tolerate. After 9 months with efforts to rate control with various agents, amiodarone was reintroduced at 400 mg/day. which achieved full control, but to obviate the development of skin changes, flecainide was added at a dose of 100 mg twice a day, and the dose of amiodarone was gradually reduced to 200 mg/day. This combination regimen has produced no side effects or organ toxicity, although a degree of hypogonadism developed. It responded well to testosterone replacement. On the combination regimen, there have been no symptomatic arrhythmia recurrences over 8 years. Amiodarone and flecainide may have additive or synergistic effects in maintaining sinus rhythm in atrial fibrillation; the antiarrhythmic property of amiodarone is likely to minimize or nullify the proarryhthmic reactions of flecainide during combination therapy. This combination regimen may allow the extension of the use of flecainide in controlling refractory atrial flutter and fibrillation in patients with structural cardiac disease. The efficacy and safety of the combination regimen of the two drugs should be addressed in controlled clinical trials.
ISSN:1074-2484
1940-4034
DOI:10.1177/107424849600100409